Construction planning in the U.S. saw a small bump in March, but the headline number doesn’t tell the full story.
Planning rose 1.8 percent compared to February, according to Dodge Construction Network. That’s the first increase of the year after a slow start. On the surface, that sounds like things are stabilizing. In reality, most of the industry is still struggling.
The growth is coming from one place.
One Sector Is Propping Everything Up
Commercial planning increased in March, but that gain is almost entirely tied to data center work. Strip those projects out and the numbers flip in the opposite direction.
Without data centers, commercial planning would actually be down more than 12 percent compared to last year. That is a huge gap and it shows how concentrated the current pipeline has become.
At the same time, institutional planning dropped nearly 9 percent. Other categories are either flat or trending down.
Why Data Centers Are Different
Most types of construction are feeling the pressure from higher interest rates, tighter financing, and general uncertainty in the market. Projects are getting delayed, scaled back, or canceled.
Data centers are operating under a different set of rules.
They are tied directly to demand for AI, cloud infrastructure, and large scale data processing. Tech companies are still spending aggressively in this space, and that demand is pushing projects forward even while other sectors stall.
Large Projects Are Driving the Numbers
March included 54 projects valued at 100 million dollars or more entering planning.
Some of the biggest include:
Amazon is planning a 17 building data center campus in North Carolina valued at roughly 8.5 billion dollars.
Microsoft is moving forward with a multi building data center project in Iowa valued around 2.5 billion dollars.
Projects like these are large enough to move the needle on national construction data by themselves.
The Pipeline Looks Strong but It Is Narrow
Overall planning activity is still up more than 25 percent compared to a year ago. That suggests there is still a healthy amount of work lined up.
But the mix of that work matters.
Right now, a large portion of that pipeline is concentrated in one category. Outside of data centers, momentum is limited.
What It Means
Construction is not falling apart, but it is not broad based growth either.
One sector is doing the heavy lifting while the rest of the market slows down.
As long as data center demand stays strong, the industry will keep moving. If that demand pulls back, the weakness in the rest of the market becomes a lot harder to ignore.
