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Non-residential Construction Spending - Third Quarter 2007

Investment in non-residential building construction marked its fourth consecutive year of uninterrupted growth, fuelled mostly by sustained commercial investment in Central Canada and Alberta.

Non-residential investment hit $10.4 billion in the third quarter, up 4.9% from the second quarter.
In constant dollars, third-quarter investment was up 0.9% from the second quarter.

Growth in the non-residential sector has been on an uninterrupted upward trend since the middle of 2003.

The third-quarter increase was due mainly to the construction of major office buildings underway in Alberta, Quebec and Ontario.

Investment in the commercial component led the way with a 5.2% increase to $6.2 billion. In the institutional component, investment rose 5.3% to $2.7 billion, while investment in the industrial component increased 3.1% to $1.5 billion.

Overall, eight provinces and two territories recorded increases, but the biggest gains, in dollars, occurred in Ontario and Quebec. In both provinces, investment rose in all three components, reaching new record highs.

Among the factors sparking the non-residential sector are a strong labour market, high profits recorded by Canadian corporations, healthy retail and wholesale sectors, declining vacancy rates in large urban centres and Western Canada's dynamic economy.

Of the 34 census metropolitan areas (CMAs), 23 showed gains in the third quarter, with Toronto, Calgary and Montréal showing the largest increases (in dollars). Calgary and Montréal both set a new quarterly high.

Investment in non-residential building construction, by census metropolitan area1
 
Third quarter 2006
Second quarter 2007
Third quarter 2007
Second quarter to third quarter 2007
 
Seasonally adjusted
 
$ millions
% change
St. John's
40
47
51
10.6
Halifax
122
97
86
-11.8
Moncton
26
45
52
17.0
Saint John
25
33
39
19.5
Saguenay
31
31
43
39.9
Québec
166
190
219
15.4
Sherbrooke
48
43
44
2.9
Trois-Rivières
32
44
53
21.9
Montréal
739
816
886
8.5
Ottawa–Gatineau, Ontario/Quebec
417
427
422
-1.3
Ottawa–Gatineau (Que. part)
45
44
49
13.4
Ottawa–Gatineau (Ont. part)
372
384
373
-2.9
Kingston
32
50
50
-0.2
Peterborough
19
14
15
7.4
Oshawa
103
96
97
1.0
Toronto
1,608
1,603
1,729
7.9
Hamilton
167
135
128
-5.4
St. Catharines–Niagara
92
72
67
-7.4
Kitchener
141
134
138
2.6
Brantford
19
40
39
-1.6
Guelph
44
51
51
1.0
London
117
110
135
22.8
Windsor
83
90
86
-3.8
Barrie
54
54
64
18.5
Greater Sudbury
34
59
68
15.9
Thunder Bay
28
21
20
-7.3
Winnipeg
177
164
164
0.0
Regina
58
59
70
17.1
Saskatoon
98
101
89
-11.6
Calgary
674
1,145
1,259
10.0
Edmonton
394
456
447
-1.9
Kelowna
37
50
64
28.5
Abbotsford
79
72
62
-13.3
Vancouver
735
843
884
4.9
Victoria
113
104
112
7.5
Go online to view the census subdivisions that comprise the census metropolitan areas.
 
Commercial: Robust gains in office building in Alberta, Quebec and Ontario
Investment in commercial building construction hit another record high, in the wake of robust activity in office building sites in Alberta, Quebec and Ontario.

Overall, seven provinces showed gains in commercial investment in the third quarter. Alberta (+7.8% to $1.6 billion), Ontario (+4.2% to $2.2 billion) and Quebec (+5.9% to $909 million) experienced the largest investment growth (in dollars), and each set a record high.

On the other hand, Nova Scotia experienced a second consecutive decline, which was the largest among the provinces. This decrease was the result of commercial construction projects started in mid-2005 and early 2006 and now mostly completed.

Among the 34 CMAs, 21 registered quarterly growth. The strongest gain (in dollars) was in Calgary, where investment rose 15.3% to $928 million. It was followed by Toronto, with a 6.0% increase to $1.2 billion.

Several economic factors were consistent with a fertile environment for the commercial sector. These included the vigorous retail and wholesale sectors and declining vacancy rates for office buildings in major Canadian urban centres. These declining rates have provided added incentive for office building construction and the construction of shopping malls and warehouses.

Institutional: New record, thanks to gains in educational building
Investment in institutional building construction increased for the third straight quarter. This robust gain was largely the result of strong spending on the construction of educational facilities in seven provinces.

Provincially, the biggest third-quarter increase (in dollars) occurred in Quebec, where investment rose 16.4% to $491 million, the third straight quarterly gain. This increase was the result of projects in educational and health care building construction.

In Ontario, which recorded growth for a second consecutive quarter, institutional investment increased 5.8% to $1.0 billion.

In contrast, British Columbia posted the biggest decline (in dollars). This decrease was the result of institutional construction projects started in mid-2005 and early 2006 and now mostly completed.

In total, 24 of the 34 CMAs posted gains. Toronto led the way in terms of growth (in dollars), its second consecutive quarterly gain. In contrast, Ottawa recorded the most significant decline.

Industrial: Back-to-back quarterly increases
Investment in industrial building construction increased for the second straight quarter.
Strong investment gains in primary industrial buildings in nine provinces, particularly Ontario and Quebec, more than offset declines in the other industrial categories.

At the provincial level, the largest contribution to the quarterly increase (in dollars) occurred in Ontario, the result of gains in all industrial construction buildings. This reflected a higher number of major projects for manufacturing plants and utilities buildings that began in 2007.

Alberta posted the largest decline (in dollars), as investment in all industrial building categories dropped after high spending in previous quarters. This decline was the result of several industrial projects that started in 2006 and that are now mostly completed.

In the third quarter, manufacturers continued to face increased production costs, stronger global competition and the appreciation of the Canadian dollar. On the other hand, the industrial capacity utilization rate among Canadian industries increased slightly in the second quarter of 2007.

Of the 34 CMAs, 21 posted increases. Toronto and Montréal posted the highest third-quarter increases, the result of further major industrial construction projects that started at the beginning of 2007.

After posting a record high in the second quarter, Calgary registered the most significant decline in dollars, in the wake of a drop in all industrial construction building categories.

Investment in non-residential building construction
 
Third quarter 2006
Second quarter 2007
Third quarter 2007
Second quarter to third quarter 2007
 
Seasonally adjusted
 
$ millions
% change
Canada
9,051
9,888
10,376
4.9
Newfoundland and Labrador
59
71
83
18.0
Prince Edward Island
37
31
29
-4.3
Nova Scotia
216
187
186
-0.4
New Brunswick
158
151
170
12.5
Quebec
1,464
1,584
1,708
7.8
Ontario
3,574
3,562
3,756
5.4
Manitoba
241
241
246
2.3
Saskatchewan
229
233
237
1.8
Alberta
1,712
2,311
2,403
4.0
British Columbia
1,336
1,488
1,519
2.1
Yukon
16
17
18
2.9
Northwest Territories
8
8
17
107.6
Nunavut
3
5
3
-24.8
 

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