Manufacturing, Utilities, and Multifamily Lead the Way
BOSTON, MA — April 17, 2026 —Total construction startsrose 12.8% inMarchto a seasonally adjustedannual rate of$1.22trillion,according toDodge ҴýappNetwork. Nonresidential building starts grew by 6.3%, residential starts improved 2.6%, and nonbuilding starts rebounded 37.9% over the month. On a year-to-date basis, total construction starts were down 0.5% through March. Nonresidential starts were down 0.2%, residential starts were down 7.2% and nonbuilding starts improved by 6.4% over the same period. For the 12 months ending March 2026, total construction starts were up 5.4% from the 12 months ending March 2025. Residential starts were down 5.3%, nonresidential starts were up 6.5% and nonbuilding was up 15.8%.
“Afew strong categories overcameslightweakness in all the others in March,”statedEric Gaus, Chief Economist of Ҵýapp. “The commercial segmentshows the most strength with12 monthgrowth for all sub-categories except warehousing.”
Nonbuilding
Nonbuildingconstructionstartsjumped37.9% inMarchto a seasonally adjusted annual rate of$369 billion. Three mega-projects continued the flip-flopping streak in the electric power/utilities segment, which popped up 353.6% m/m in March. Miscellaneous nonbuilding increased as well, rising 44.0% over the month. Conversely, highways and bridges (-13.6% m/m) and environmental public works (-4.1% m/m) reversed gains from the previous month. On a year-to-date basis through March, nonbuilding construction was up6.4% alongside the68.6% year-to-date growth in electric power/utilities. The remaining public works sectors, however, are seeing deeper year-to-date declines.
For the 12 months endingMarch2026, total nonbuilding starts were up15.8%.Environmental public worksfellby6.4% compared to the 12 months endingMarch2025.Highway and bridgestartsweredown1.0%, miscellaneous nonbuilding starts were up34.9%andutility/gas starts increased52.3% over the same period.
The largest nonbuilding projects to break ground inMarchincludedthe$2.5 billionDarden Clean Energy Projectin CantuaCreak, CA,the $2.0 billionPhase 1Natural Gas Plant/Site Infrastructurein Panhandle, TX, and the$2.0 billionCPV Basin Ranch Energy Centerin Barstow, TX.
Nonresidential
Nonresidential building starts improved 6.3% in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $466 billion. Commercial starts were down 9.2%, mostly driven by the 16.0% m/m pull back in offices and data centers. Warehouses (-6.6% m/m) also lost ground in March, while, hotels (+19.3% m/m), stores (+5.6% m/m), and parking garages (0.8% m/m) made gains. Institutional starts contracted 1.5% over the month, despite growth in education (+3.4% m/m) and healthcare (+9.7%). Other institutional categories more than offset that growth, dropping 11.8% m/m. After a lackluster February, manufacturing construction also bounced back, increasing by 251.9% m/m. On a year-to-date basis through March, nonresidential starts are down 0.2%. Commercial and industrial construction gained 18.0%, while institutional starts are down -17.8% over the same period.
For the 12 months endingMarch2026, totalnonresidentialstarts were up6.5% compared to the 12 months endingMarch2025. Commercial starts were up19.2%, institutional startsdecreased5.7%, and manufacturing starts wereup20.2% over the same period.
The largest nonresidential building projects to break ground inMarchwerethe$3.4 billionShintechEthylene PEP-2 & Vinyl Chloride Monomer (SPP-4)inPlaquemine, LA,the$2.4 billionSavannah River Plutonium Processing Facilityproject in Aiken, SC, andthe $953millionPort Terminal 1 Replacementproject inAnchorage,AK.
Residential
Residential building starts grew by 2.6% in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $385 billion. Single family starts decreased 5.3% m/m, and multifamily starts expanded by 15.3% m/m. On a year-to-date basis, residential starts are down 7.2%, with single family starts down 14.1% and multifamily starts up 6.1%.
For the 12 months endingMarch2026, total residential starts fell5.3%. Single familystartsfell15.7% compared to the 12 months endingMarch2025, and multifamily starts increased16.3% over the same period.
The largest multifamily structures to break ground inMarchwere the $727 millionDiscovery Park (PA 31) Apartmentsin Irvine,CA, the $577 millionHarborside 4 Residential Towerproject Jersey City, NJ and $420 million61 Broadway Residential Conversionproject in New York, NY.
Regionally,total construction starts inMarchroseinandthe South Central (+41.7% m/m),the West (+22.1% m/m),the South Atlantic (+7.5% m/m) and the Northeast(+3.1% m/m).Meanwhile,theMidwest (-15.1% m/m) was the only region to see a decline.



