Walking through downtown Nashville earlier this month, I
heard a country singer lamenting that he lost his girlfriend, his pickup truck
and his construction business. OK, that last one was actually his hound dog,
but it won’t be long before we hear songs about the heartbreak of losing
construction work.
I was in the Music City for a trade show called INTEX, which
brings together wall and ceiling contractors, architects, and exterior
insulating and finishing professionals.
Attendance on the first day of the show exceeded my
expectations. Knowing how much construction pros are hurting, I anticipated an
empty exhibit hall. While attendance was not exactly robust, a steady stream of
visitors came by our booth to pick up our magazines and talk shop.
A majority of the contractors said they still had projects
in the pipeline. They were getting killed on residential work, but their
commercial work was keeping them going.
One contractor said he had enough work to stay busy until
August. Another said he had enough in his pipeline to carry his company through
November.
But compared with past years, when their pipelines were
overflowing for 24 months or more, new projects were frozen or invisible. Each
contractor wore the look of someone who knew dark times were around the corner,
save an eleventh-hour stay of execution.
And yet these pros were still positive, still hopeful. They
felt lots of commercial jobs were in limbo, just waiting to be green-lighted.
Maybe the federal stimulus packages would free up financing, or perhaps the
economy would rebound and give developers the confidence to move forward.
Outside the convention center, downtown Nashville
sported an impressive 29-story, LEED Silver-certified office and retail project
called Pinnacle Symphony Place (
www.pinnaclesymphonyplace.com).
Even on Saturday, the site was humming with construction activity.
I spoke with a couple of pros reviewing blueprints for the
project and told them how glad I was they were working. They both responded
with a cheerful “me too.” Their facial expressions and demeanors spoke even
louder. They were relieved and excited to be working. Their reactions reminded
me of how often we take our jobs for granted.
Unfortunately, the second day of the trade show was pretty
dead. Too many construction pros had concluded they simply could not afford to
travel or take time away from their businesses to make the trip.
What about your project pipeline? How many months do you
have before your work runs out?What
will it take to refill your pipeline? Where do you see opportunity?
Share your thoughts by posting a comment to this blog.
You just might be a huge encouragement to your peers who need to read some
positive observations.
By: James Johnson
Posted: April 28, 2009 10:02 AM
I believe construction guys that will survive (possibly thrive) are going to put an extra emphasis on building in an environmentally sensitive fashion. Find a way to keep your costs about the same but keep the environment in mind constantly. Let your clients know and this should help.
James
http://designerplumbingoutlet.com
By: James Johnson
Posted: April 28, 2009 10:04 AM
James
http://designerplumbingoutlet.com
By: James
Posted: April 28, 2009 10:04 AM
James
http://designerplumbingoutlet.com
By: James
Posted: April 28, 2009 10:05 AM
James
http://designerplumbingoutlet.com
By: Greg
Posted: June 25, 2009 3:56 PM
Greg
http://needplumbingsupplies.com