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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Commercial in the United States (TLCOMCONS) from Jan 2002 to May 2025 about expenditures, commercial, construction, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Nonresidential in the United States (TLNRESCONS) from Jan 2002 to May 2025 about nonresidential, expenditures, construction, and USA.
Based on planned construction development over the next few years, the value of non-residential construction put in place in 2028 in the United States is expected to reach roughly *** billion U.S. dollars. Non-residential construction can include segments like the construction of lodging, offices, commercial buildings, health care, and education. Generally, the U.S. construction industry is linked to the economic wellbeing of the country. Construction industry needs Within the non-residential building industry, commercial building construction in the U.S. decreased in 2024 after increasing considerably the prior two years. However, the construction industry faces challenges such as the rising construction costs. The modernization of a typically conservative industry will be important in the near future to support customer demands and to improve operation models. Integrating sustainable building processes and features in projects as well as establishing technological advancements like building information modeling (BIM) will be essential for the future of the construction industry. Non-residential vs. residential During the past years, new residential construction in the United States usually had a higher value than non-residential construction. Until 2019, the values of new residential and non-residential construction had remained fairly similar. However, the value of new residential construction started quite fast between 2020 and 2022. Nevertheless, the number of permits for private housing construction started decreasing since late 2022
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Graph and download economic data for Total Private Construction Spending: Nonresidential in the United States (PNRESCONS) from Jan 1993 to May 2025 about nonresidential, expenditures, construction, private, and USA.
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Housing Starts in the United States increased to 1321 Thousand units in June from 1263 Thousand units in May of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Housing Starts - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Total Construction in the United States (TTLCONS) from Jan 1993 to May 2025 about headline figure, expenditures, construction, and USA.
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Building Permits in the United States increased to 1397 Thousand in June from 1394 Thousand in May of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Building Permits - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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The data set is created by merging the non-residential buildings from the building file of the Wuppertal statistical office with the addresses of the real estate cadastre, which is carried out once a year. The year in which the building was built is also classified into 11 age groups, these are mostly 10-year intervals. The resulting data set models the buildings with the house number coordinates of the real estate cadastre as punctiform objects. The attributes include i.a. the address (street name and house number), the year the building was built and the age group from the above classification. The building file is based on the results of the 1987 census, it is continuously updated using the statistical survey forms from the building application documents and status reports from the building permit process regarding approval, start of construction and completion of the building. In 2015, the building file was systematically improved through comparisons with other data sources (2011 census, GWG data, etc.). The annual intersection with the addresses of the real estate cadastre will take place in the first half of the year from 2017 onwards. The intersection results are provided in ESRI Shapefile, KML, GeoJSON and CSV formats as open data under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Manufacturing in the United States (TLMFGCONS) from Jan 2002 to May 2025 about expenditures, construction, manufacturing, and USA.
(StatCan Product) This information product has been customized to present information on monthly building permit information for Alberta's census subdivisions in 2015. The monthly Building Permits Survey of Canadian municipalities collects data on the value of construction intentions for buildings in the non-residential sector and the number of dwellings authorized and value of construction projects in the residential sector. The survey also measures the number of dwelling units demolished. Building permit data are widely used as a leading indicator for the construction industry since the issuance of a building permit is one of the first steps in the construction process. Statistics on building permits are essential for the computation of residential capital expenditures and inputs for the quarterly and annual estimates of net capital stock and depreciation by component. They are also a major input in the computation of the investment in non-residential building construction on a sub-annual basis. In addition, the results of this survey are used by CMHC (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation) as a reference base for conducting a monthly survey of housing starts and completions in accordance with its mandate. The statistics are used by a wide range of economists, construction industry analysts, housing market analysts and economic development officers across Canada.
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Graph and download economic data for New Privately-Owned Housing Units Started: Units in Buildings with 5 Units or More (HOUST5F) from Jan 1959 to May 2025 about 5-unit structures +, housing starts, privately owned, housing, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Residential in the United States (TLRESCONS) from Jan 2002 to May 2025 about residential, expenditures, construction, and USA.
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North America Architectural Coatings Market size was valued at USD 20.52 Billion in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 29.67 Billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 4.72% from 2026 to 2032.
Key Market Drivers
• Increasing Demand for Residential and Commercial Construction: The North America architectural coatings market is driven by the growing demand for residential and commercial construction projects. In 2023, the U.S. Census Bureau reported a 12% increase in housing starts, reaching 1.5 million units. This surge in construction activity directly boosts the need for architectural coatings. The trend highlights the market's reliance on the broader construction industry. • Rising Focus on Eco-Friendly and Sustainable Coatings: Eco-friendly and sustainable coatings are gaining traction due to environmental concerns and regulatory pressures.
The Population and Housing Census 2000 was prepared and conducted according to the recommendations of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe and the Statistical Office of the European Communities (Eurostat), which guarantee that the census data are internationally comparable. Also the comparability with the data of previous censuses carried out in Estonia was taken into account. Census 2000 was carried out from March 31 to April 9.
The Statistical Office of Estonia was responsible for conducting the Census. The purpose of the Census was to collect data on the size, composition and distribution of the country's population and access housing stock and conditions. The moment of the Census was 00.00 on 31 March 2000; the data collected in the Census reflect the characteristics of housing and of the population as of the moment of the Census.
The content of the Census data and the data collection methods were developed in the Statistical Office in cooperation with the experts of different fields. Regulation of the Government of the Republic 5 March 1999 approved the Census questionnaires and Census rules.
The Census covered all country.
The Statistical Office of Estonia (SOE) launched the mapping programme for the 2000 Population and Housing Census in 1995. After completing the test areas the specifications for the digital Census maps were finalized. According to the Specification, 1:50 000 maps in rural areas and 1:5 000 maps in urban areas were drawn. The specification was optimized to create a cartographic basis for the Census planning (Census area (CA) delineation) and for the Census itself (maps for enumerators, maps for supervisors, etc.). The Census mapping process was outsourced from SOE. The work was done by two companies - one in urban, another in rural areas. The production methodology was different in urban and rural areas. In rural areas, paper maps of the 1989 Census were used as a base source material, digitized by the mapping company and updated by local governments. In urban areas, the existing maps and orthophotos were used as a base source and the maps were updated by the mapping company. For rural and urban areas the municipalities compiled household lists including the number of inhabitants in each building or apartment. The purpose of household lists was to provide information about the number of inhabitants for the delineation of enumeration areas (EA).
The borders of Census units were marked on digital Population Census maps and the maps were printed for Census purposes. SOE stores digital maps in urban areas in Mapinfo, in rural areas in ArcView software and household lists in Foxpro software. The Census maps were ready by December 1999. Digital Population Census maps with the registered borders of administrative and settlement units are the basis for presenting the Census results in a cartographic way and for the development of Census GIS.
The Census covered: - persons who were in the Republic of Estonia at the moment of the Census (March 31, at 00.00) (excluding the diplomatic staff of foreign diplomatic missions and consular posts and their family members and persons in active service in foreign army); - persons who resided in the Republic of Estonia but who were in foreign states temporarily for a term of up to one year; - diplomatic staff of diplomatic missions and consular posts of the Republic of Estonia and their family members, who were in a foreign state at the moment of the Census; - residential buildings and other buildings used for habitation, and apartments and other dwellings situated therein (excluding buildings of foreign diplomatic missions and consular posts and dwellings situated therein).
Census/enumeration data [cen]
Face-to-face [f2f]
PHC 2000 was conducted using two types of questionnaires - the Personal Questionnaire containing 31 questions, and the Housing Questionnaire with 12 questions. The Census questionnaires collected personal, household information as well as dwelling data.
Personal data include: 1.1. first and surname; personal identification code; 1.2. person’s and his/her parents’ place of birth, person’s permanent place of residence and location at the Census moment, person’s permanent place of residence on 12 January 1989, year of arrival in Estonia, address of the place of work; 1.3. sex, date of birth, citizenship, ethnic nationality, mother tongue, knowledge of languages (answering the question is voluntary), marital status, number of children given birth to, mother’s age at the time of birth of the first child; 1.4. main sources of subsistence, length of working week in the week preceding the Census (number of hours worked), social status (in military service, not working, actively seeking work, ready to start work, student (pupil), pensioner, homemaker, not working for other reasons), name of the main place of work / main employer (answering the question is voluntary), economic activity of the main place of work, employment status at the main place of work (employee with stable contract, other employee, entrepreneur-employer, farmer with salaried employees, self-employed person, freelancer, farmer without salaried employees, contributing family workers in a family enterprise, farm, member of commercial association), occupation at main place of work, length of usual working week; 1.5. level of curriculum that the person has completed or studies currently, highest level of vocational or professional education completed, highest level of general education completed; 1.6. long-term disability or illness determined by the medical commission of experts; 1.7. religious affiliation and faith confessed (answering the question is voluntary).
Household data describe: 2.1. type of institution; 2.2. list of household members, relationship of each household member to the reference person, family relationships between the household members, permanent and temporary members of the household, duration of absence of a permanent household member in months, duration of presence of a temporary household member; 2.3. legal basis for the use of the dwelling; 2.4. the links between the household and agricultural activity.
Data on dwelling include: 3.1. type, form of ownership, total area, number of rooms, existence of a kitchen, plumbing and heating (water supply system, sewage disposal system, hot water, bath (shower), sauna, flush toilet, electricity, gas, central heating, electric heating); 3.2. address, type and period of construction of the building containing dwellings.
Two scanners were used for optical data entry. The application software for data processing were worked out in co-operation with the company AS AboBase Systems and based on Oracle tools. The scanning of the Census questionnaires was performed in 2000 from 10 May to 22 September. During that period 3,505,451 questionnaires were scanned. 135 operators who had passed the training were engaged in the data processing.
For evaluating the coverage of the Census and the quality of the Census data, a post-enumeration sample survey was organized. It covered about 1% of the population and a stratified random sample of enumeration areas was drawn. The post-enumeration survey was carried out from 14 to 19 April 2000 in 50 enumeration areas. Comparison of the Census data and the data collected in the post-enumeration survey showed that the undercoverage of the Census was on an average 1.2%.
This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (11 items: Canada; Prince Edward Island; Nova Scotia; Newfoundland and Labrador ...), Housing estimates (3 items: Housing starts; Housing under construction; Housing completions ...), Type of unit (6 items: Total units; Semi-detached; Single-detached; Multiples ...).
The data set is created by intersecting the non-residential buildings from the building file of the Wuppertal Statistical Office with the addresses of the property cadastre once a year. Here, the building construction year is also classified into 11 age groups, most of which are 10-year intervals. The resulting data set models the buildings with the house number coordinates of the property cadastre as point-shaped objects. The attributes include, inter alia, the address (street name and house number), the year of construction of the building and the age group from the above-mentioned classification. The building file is based on the results of the 1987 census and is continuously updated via the statistical survey sheets from the building application documents and status reports from the building permit process on the approval, start of construction and completion of the building. In 2015, the building file was systematically improved by comparing it with other data sources (Census 2011, GWG data, etc.). The annual intersection with the addresses of the property cadastre will take place from 2017 onwards in the first half of each year. The intersection results are provided in the formats ESRI-Shapefile, KML, GeoJSON and CSV as open data under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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Macau’s construction industry is estimated to have shrunk by 15.4% in real terms in 2020, owing to the outbreak of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and its impact on consumer and business confidence and government revenues. According to Macau’s Statistics and Census Service (DSEC), the total gross fixed capital formation in the construction industry fell by 15.4% in 2020. Macau was one of the first regions outside China to start a gradual tourism lockdown in January 2020; this has heavily weighed on government revenues and the economy, which is heavily dependent on the gambling and tourism sectors, with the casino sector representing over 70% of the region’s tax revenue and employing one-fifth of the active workforce in Macau. The fall in government revenues is expected to have weighed on spending on public infrastructure projects last year. Read More
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US Floor Covering Market size was valued at USD 26.5 Billion in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 38.7 Billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 4.8% from 2026 to 2032.
Key Market Drivers:
Growth in Residential Construction Projects: The United States Census Bureau reported a 21.1% rise in housing starts in 2023, totalling 1.56 million units. As new homes demand a variety of flooring options, the market for hardwood, tiles, carpets and laminates is expanding. The solid property market is driving up demand for floor coverings.
Rising Demand for Sustainable Flooring: According to the National Association of Home Builders' 2023 study, 75% of customers choose green building materials. This trend encourages innovation, with manufacturers developing sustainable materials such as bamboo, repurposed wood and eco-friendly carpeting.
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US Wallcovering Market size was valued at USD 35.75 Billion in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 48.73 Billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 3.95% from 2025 to 2032.
Key Market Drivers: Increasing Residential Construction Activity: The strong development in residential construction is boosting demand for wallcoverings in the United States. According to the United States Census Bureau, new privately owned housing starts reached 1.46 million units in 2023, with single-family housing starts increasing by 16.9% between November and December 2023. Furthermore, the National Association of Realtors estimated that existing house remodeling spending will exceed $472 billion by 2023, indicating a strong need for interior design products such as wallcoverings.
Growing Focus on Sustainable and Eco-friendly Materials: Demand for environmentally friendly wallcoverings is on the rise. According to the U.S. Green Building Council, the number of LEED-certified buildings has increased by 19% every year since 2017, with over 80,000 projects accredited by 2023. The EPA's Environmentally Preferable Purchasing Program has experienced a 25 percent increase in procurement of sustainable building materials, including wallcoverings, between 2020-2023.
(StatCan Product) Customization details: This information product has been customized to present monthly information on the value and number of building permits for Alberta and Alberta census subdivisions annually from 1992 to YTD 2014 (January to July). The monthly building permit variables presented are: Sector: - Residential - Non-Residential Building Type: - Commercial - Industrial - Institutional Building Permits Survey The monthly Building Permits Survey of Canadian municipalities collects data on the value of construction intentions for buildings in the non-residential sector and the number of dwellings authorized and value of construction projects in the residential sector. The survey also measures the number of dwelling units demolished. Building permit data are widely used as a leading indicator for the construction industry since the issuance of a building permit is one of the first steps in the construction process. Statistics on building permits are essential for the computation of residential capital expenditures and inputs for the quarterly and annual estimates of net capital stock and depreciation by component. They are also a major input in the computation of the investment in non-residential building construction on a sub-annual basis. In addition, the results of this survey are used by CMHC (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation) as a reference base for conducting a monthly survey of housing starts and completions in accordance with its mandate. The statistics are used by a wide range of economists, construction industry analysts, housing market analysts and economic development officers across Canada. Product Main Page
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Graph and download economic data for Total Construction Spending: Commercial in the United States (TLCOMCONS) from Jan 2002 to May 2025 about expenditures, commercial, construction, and USA.