The Chronicle

Concern over building delays

- BY SOPHIE FOSTER

Queensland’s constructi­on crisis has forced a market shift, supercharg­ing demand for certain types of homes, with some builders now hoarding steel and timber as tradies become harder to nail down.

The situation is expected to worsen, with the Property Council of Queensland warning the full weight of rising costs, availabili­ty of constructi­on materials and ongoing labour shortages were “only now being realised” and could take the rest of the decade to pan out.

Experts say the crisis has already caused a shift in real estate market sentiment, with buyers averse to anything requiring constructi­on work, driving up demand for movein-ready homes.

Property Council Qld executive director Jen Williams believes “soaring constructi­on costs, crippling supply chain issues, natural disaster recovery and a well-documented skills shortage are culminatin­g in a rare combinatio­n of circumstan­ces set to impact the industry for the foreseeabl­e future”.

Buildcorp new business manager Allison Turner said supply lines were so heavily pandemic-impacted that some builders were now “hoarding” materials.

“Our estimating team since August last year has been receiving weekly notificati­ons regarding price increases and very rarely are they in single digit increases,” she said.

“Just as we were all hoarding toilet paper, we’re now seeing different contractor­s hoarding materials like gyprock, piping and all sorts of different things. So that’s just adding to the pressure.”

Constructi­on Skills Qld research director Robert Sobyra said the building pipeline was “chockers”. In December it was valued at about $4b more than the peak of Brisbane’s apartment boom – and prices, he said, rarely fell after tasting a rise.

“Prices never go backwards. Once they hit a certain level, they just stay flat for a long period of time unless you have a serious event like a GFC.”

He warned that took six years to reach the price rises seen during the pandemic and would take another six years to flatten out.

Around 6500 Queensland homes listed on realestate.com.au last week were tagged as renovated to entice buyers looking to avoid the hassle of dealing with builders right now. Houses continue to see the biggest interest, with the appetite for land set to taper amid consumer fears over constructi­on timelines.

Buyers agent and author of Buy Now Lloyd Edge said clients were now averse to property requiring constructi­on.

“Many people are,” he said, “we’ve seen the supply chain has a lot of delays. Constructi­on prices are going up every two weeks … There was huge demand for constructi­on through the pandemic but that’s also left a few people high and dry.”

He said even those on fixed-price contracts saw their builders say they can’t build for that and ask for variations.

“Materials have gone up so much, that’s why so many builders have gone broke this year. Now they’re actually putting a clause in the contract which is not allowing fixedprice, which is making it harder with lending, because that’s what banks want. Builders won’t commit to fixedprice contracts and banks don’t want it unless it’s fixed-price, so buyers are hesitant. Unless they have a buffer, a lot of people are staying away from them.”

The swing is a major shift for investors looking for quick gains that renovation or upgrades bring.

“My buyers love doing things that add value. That used to be through things like constructi­on of new dwellings and duplexes,” Mr Edge said, “but because of the way the constructi­on industry is at the moment, a lot of them are turning to more simple cosmetic type renovation­s.”

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