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March 4, 2025

2025 Construction Trends and How They Impact Integrators

Get the latest updates on 2025 construction trends so you can identify future business opportunities.

Get the latest updates on 2025 construction trends so you can identify future business opportunities.

Twice each year, we use our Electronic Systems Outlook report to break down what’s happening in U.S. construction and explain how these trends will impact your work.

Our latest Electronic Systems Outlook report—the Winter 2024 edition, which includes information based upon actual data from January through November 2024, as well as forecasted information for 2025 and beyond—is free for NSCA members to download.

In conjunction with the release of the report, we also host a webinar with research firm FMI Corp. to discuss the most interesting findings.

If you missed our discussion, here are the 2025 construction trends shaping our industry.

Manufacturing Construction: From Peak to Decline

Following the pandemic, manufacturing construction experienced a significant peak due in part to government reshoring and Buy American initiatives. Although the construction momentum we’ve seen in manufacturing over the past few years is expected to decline through 2028, it’s important to note that this decline follows unprecedented highs from 2020 and 2021. The manufacturing sector remains strong despite the slowdown anticipated in 2025. Its continued strength should persist as it continues to be supported by government policies that bolster domestic production.

Government Construction: Demand Will Swell

Recent return-to-office (RTO) policies are highlighting a growing demand for federal office spaces. Although reports indicate that some federal facilities were scarcely used in recent years, RTO is set to change that. In fact, the opposite may happen, where existing facilities struggle to accommodate the influx of workers who are coming back to the office full-time—or heading to the office for the first time after working remotely for years.

To address this challenge and accommodate those who live far from a federal office building, satellite offices and smaller workspaces may be an option across the country. The industry may see additional construction growth as a result.

Warehouse Construction: Slowdown Ahead

The warehouse market has seen substantial growth over the past few years; however, construction activity decreased last year, and 2025 construction trends point to another decrease this year before a projected leveling-off occurs in 2027, followed by a resurgence. (Even Amazon’s new starts for warehouses have declined—a reflection of this over-building.)

The primary reason for this decline in warehouse construction is the over-building that occurred post-pandemic. When stay-at-home orders left people no choice but to rely on e-commerce, warehouse construction surged to help companies rapidly expand their capacities and capabilities.

As e-commerce continues to grow, the need for additional warehouse construction will eventually ramp back up, leading to renewed growth.

Retail Construction: Fewer Locations, Bigger Impact

Brick-and-mortar retail has experienced growth over the past few years, but a decline is anticipated in 2025. This decrease is due in part to the rise of e-commerce, which has surged past historical highs and taken consumers away from traditional retail spaces. Inflation also plays a role here as it exerts pressure on the retail market.

While there are fewer physical retail locations today than a decade or two ago, the stores that remain must step up their technology game by offering immersive experiences and finding new ways to attract shoppers to compete with online shopping.

Healthcare Construction: Incoming Surge

The United States has a growing elderly population that is driving the need for more healthcare. This means more construction to create clinics, assisted living and continuing care facilities, and hospitals. The Baby Boomer generation, which is rapidly aging, is driving this increased demand for healthcare facilities.

Construction in healthcare may also include specialized facilities that cater to this market and support the physical and mental well-being of older adults. It will also include integration of advanced health technologies, such as telehealth and wearable devices.

How to Use This Report

You can use the information in this Electronic Systems Outlook report to drive your strategic planning and sales and marketing initiatives.

If you have questions about how to apply this data, how you should change your business strategy as a result, reach out. We’re here to help.

And if you want to hear us discuss these findings in more detail, along with the big-picture impact they’ll have, watch the entire webinar on-demand.

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