My father is still in the construction industry. He’s worked as a soils engineer for approx 40 years. Been through a couple of down cycles (90s – he was temporarily laid off but has stayed with the same company his entire life). I did a little work for his company throughout the years, but started doing small jobs when I was 16.
At 16, I was digging holes and helping out with soils tests in an around Irvine. Today, Standard Pacific has the start of a community, but obviously they’re having trouble selling. My point being that in that particular location, someone started researching the viability of building on that land some 12 years ago – with actual construction just starting last year. At the time, they were avocado and orange groves.
Granted, not all jobs start that far out, but my dad’s company has no jobs to bid on. He’s been in San Diego for the last 10 years, as they’ve done many of the big residential projects and many commercial projects you all see today.
Being that they do the soil testing and supervise the grading, they’re pretty much the first step or phase in the construction process.
There is nothing even on the horizon for them to bid on. Nothing, zilch, nada… The 90s was slow, but he said there was still work. This is one of the first times they’ve ever seen where there are virtually no commercial or residential projects planned at all. The only thing out there is government contracts, but there’s more red tape with bidding on those and they’re not in abundance. His firm stoped competing for them a few years back because they were flying high on the commercial/residential bubble.
Any sign of a turn around will start with the soils engineering firms. We hear a lot about starts and permits…Many of those permits had the soils work done months ago. Not that it is a surprise to anyone here, but the permits should see even more declines in the next 6 to 9 months. When the turnaround comes (whenever that happens), permits will lag the start of the soils grading by about 6 months to a year.