But worries grow over jobs in regions
London is continuing to fare better than others, the latest survey of Rider Levett Bucknall offices into the covid-19 pandemic has found.
It is the third monthly survey RLB, which has 22 affiliate firms around the world and employs 4,000 people globally, has produced since the coronavirus crisis escalated.
Cities which are coping well include Los Angeles, Shanghai and Sydney but Moscow, Chicago and Lisbon were doing less well.
Closer to home, the firm said London was holding up 鈥渁s the majority of larger projects are continuing鈥.
It added: 鈥淎ctivities on site are generally becoming more manageable due to the government鈥檚 Construction Leadership Council guidance.鈥
Russell Lloyd, global board director at RLB, said: 鈥淢any of London鈥檚 projects are of a larger scale nature and therefore had years of strategic planning and upfront investment, meaning that they have continued development during the pandemic. This in itself helps insulate London from the overall economic impact slightly.鈥
But regional cities including Manchester and Birmingham both reported worries about future workloads.
The report said: 鈥淏irmingham reported the number of stalled projects may increase as funding markets are hardening and easing of constraints will be key to many projects being unlocked.鈥 In Manchester, the report said there was a 鈥渘eed to stimulate residential projects in particular鈥.
Overall, the report said the number of respondents reporting a 41%-50% decline in tender enquires in June had dropped to 10.5% from 28% last month while 63% of respondents claim the fall of productivity is less than 20% compared to just under 40% in May. And 70% of those surveyed estimated that 90% of construction sites in their country were now open.
The best global performing sectors, it added, included data centres, healthcare and industrial and logistics.
Last week, a report by Mace鈥檚 consulting arm said sectors such as pharma and health, logistics centres, warehouses and data centres would hold up in the wake of the crisis. 鈥淗owever, these make up a relatively small proportion of the industry and won鈥檛 cover the losses from elsewhere,鈥 it added.
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