Latest ONS data shows output in quarter three rose by 0.6%
A rise in new work pushed construction output up by 0.6%, or 拢253m, in the three months to the end of September, according to new figures from the Office for National Statistics.
The increase in new work was boosted by private industrial, up 7.2%, new housing (1.8%) and private commercial (1.5%).
The new work output hike was tempered by a fall in repair and maintenance of 0.8%, driven by a 3% decline in private housing.
Month-on-month September saw overall construction output dip 0.2%, with a 2.1% fall in repair and maintenance being partially offset by a rise in new work of 0.7%.
Industry figures expected the slowdown in September, where the UK economy narrowly avoided going into recession, to continue.
Clive Docwra, managing director of consultant McBains, said the delay to Brexit would be remain an issue.
鈥淏usiness and investors hate uncertainty,鈥 Docwra said. 鈥淭he continuing saga of if and when the UK leaves the EU, plus the added unpredictability of the general election, means there will be a continued reluctance to commit funding to new projects.鈥
Docwra called for 鈥渟trong policy commitments鈥 from the major parties to boost housebuilding, which he said was 鈥渇ailing to deliver the number of homes required to meet the housing shortage鈥.
And Mark Robinson, chief executive of framework group Scape, said politicians鈥 spending promises highlighted 鈥the huge disconnect between both parties and what is happening on the ground.
鈥溾楽hovel ready鈥 projects take years to prepare and snap decision-making will likely see us making unwise commitments to projects that will become unviable down the line.鈥
Both chancellor Sajid Javid and his Labour shadow John McDonnell should focus on rectifying the stop-start nature of project work, Robinson added, 鈥渁nd commit to completing current infrastructure projects, such as Crossrail and HS2鈥.
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