Posts Currently viewing the category: "Construction Employment"

When it comes to supply and demand in the coming year, what role will construction play? Research from CareerBuilder finds there will be brisk job activity for those with college degrees, such as industrial engineers, marketing executives, network and computer system administrators, and nurses. The positions that don’t require degrees that are on the…(Read More)

Adaptive reuse projects are popping up in cities around the U.S. as construction companies convert old buildings into hotels. One such mini-boom is taking place in Chicago.  Many developers are turning to redevelopment rather than ground-up construction, writes Bob Geiger on GlobeSt.com. “Like the high tech industry, the hospitality industry is…(Read More)

U.S. construction spending fell in September, as investments in both public and private projects dropped. This was the second straight month of decline, according to Reuters.com. The Commerce Department says the September rate inched down 0.4 percent to an annual rate of $950.9 billion.   http://www.reuters.com/article/2014…(Read More)

Favorable economic conditions are continuing in the hotel construction sector.  Lodging Econometrics reports that Q3 had 3,516 projects consisting of 443,936 rooms. “The Pipeline has posted double-digit Year-Over-Year (YOY) increases for four consecutive quarters in both projects and rooms,” according to LodgingEconometrics.com. “In 3Q14, YOY increases are up 25…(Read More)

The construction, transportation, and health care industries are among those with high levels of interest in GPS-type technology. Indoor positioning technology offers wireless location services on mobile devices for locating objects or people when inside a building, according to Fieldlens.com. It can encompass a variety of evolving technologies, such as beacons that send…(Read More)

Construction positions that require client-facing work pay better wages than jobs that don’t emphasize face-time, according to research from FMI. The firm provides management consulting, investment banking, and research to the engineering and construction industry. Duane Craig writes on ConstructionInformer.com that since the 2008 recession, some fundamentals in the industry have…(Read More)