Major Projects Dry Up in February 2025 Construction Review

18 February 2025

Major Projects Dry Up in February 2025 Construction Review|Major Projects Dry Up in February 2025 Construction Review

THE CONSTRUCTION sector showed a sharp decline in major project starts in Glenigan’s February 2025 Construction Review, with few schemes over £100 million breaking ground in the three months to January.

This contributed to a 19% drop in total project start value, despite underlying growth in smaller developments, particularly in private housing.

Adding to the challenge, Glenigan says the development pipeline has also weakened, with fewer main contract awards and planning approvals. This points to the likelihood of further declines in both large-scale and smaller project starts in the months ahead.

However, recent interest rate cuts and the prospect of a gradual economic recovery may help to restore investor confidence as the year progresses.

Private Project Starts

There were 12% fewer housing starts compared with the same period a year earlier, according to Glenigan’s latest data.

However, project starts on housing projects jumped 19% from November 2024 to the end of January this year, highlighting quarter-on-quarter recovery.

Private housing accounted for the lion’s share (69%) of overall project starts, growing 39% year-on-year to a total value of £8.05 billion. In contrast, private apartment construction struggled, falling 48%, while student accommodation saw modest growth of 3%, buoyed by a handful of large schemes.

Underlying projects (<£100m) also performed particularly well, up on both the preceding year and the previous quarter.

It provides a more optimistic outlook for the housing market than the latest S&P Global PMI data, which suggested that total housebuilding work fell for the fourth successive month in January.

Glenigan housing starts graph

Regional Picture

The South East remained the busiest region for residential construction, although activity fell 37% year-on-year to £1.6 billion. Meanwhile, the East of England and Scotland bucked the trend, experiencing impressive growth of 73% and 86%, respectively.

London led in planning approvals, accounting for 27% of the sector (£4.14 billion), though approvals were down 27% on the previous year.

Housing Outlook

With UK house prices rising in January and an increase in new sellers entering the market, there are reasons for cautious optimism.

The Glenigan Forecast suggests private housing construction could grow by 13% in 2025, with social housing also set to increase by 11%. However, these gains must be sustained by a strong pipeline of new projects – something that recent Government pledges to boost housebuilding will be key to delivering.

While planning approvals and contract awards remain subdued, further policy interventions could help unlock development and drive much-needed growth in the sector.

Allan Wilen, Glenigan’s Economic Director commented: “While housing projects are still lagging compared to last year, the government’s focus on housebuilding and increasing consumer confidence should help form a growing development pipeline. The key will be translating this potential into actual construction starts.”

>> Read more construction data in the news

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