Total housing starts posted in increase in February, with a solid gain for single-family construction and ongoing elevated levels of multifamily development. A joint data release from the Census Bureau and HUD reports that total starts were up 3 percent, rising to a 1.288 million seasonally adjusted annual rate. Single-family starts recorded a monthly increase of 6.5 percent in February, rising to an 872,000 annual rate—the fastest annualized pace since the fall of 2007. Single-family permits were up 3.1 percent in February, also posting the fastest rate in almost 10 years.
Residential Products Online content is now on probuilder.com! Same great products coverage, now all in one place!
billboard
leaderboard2
Related Stories
In December 2018, total residential construction spending posted the first annual loss, 1.3 percent, since 2011. But, multifamily construction spending had a record high, 3.1 percent, to a $65.2 billion annual pace.
Single-family housing starts saw an uptick in September as builders worked to fill a supply deficit left by would-be home sellers opting not to sell
Census data for permits, starts, and completions shows a rate of 935,000 single‐family housing starts in June, which is 7% below the revised May figure of 1,005,000
Sales of new single-family houses in March 2012 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 328,000, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Nationwide housing starts declined 9.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 836,000 units in June as construction of multifamily buildings slowed following recent months of strong activity in that sector.
Housing starts in April were nearly 30 percent higher than the year before, with 717,000 new homes beginning construction (seasonally adjusted annual rate), according to data released today by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Dev
boombox2
boombox1
halfpage1
native1
catfish1
interstitial1