Essentials Magazine Essentials Summer 2014 | Page 8

SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION K-12 Annual Construction Report By Paul Abramson | Intelligence for Education, Inc. T he more things remain the same, the more they seem to change. Contradictory, but in the realm of school construction, apparently true. Last year, in looking at data for school construction completed in 2012, I noted that for the first time in five years the total value of construction put in place in a calendar year had risen from the year before. The uptick was hardly huge (a $700 million increase after a five-year fall of almost $8 billion) but it represented a slight turnaround. What was noticeable was that all of the increase was attributable to spending on fixing up and enlarging existing buildings. The amount spent on new schools had continued to fall. 8 essentials | summer 2014 I suggested that this was due, in part, to the effects of the Recession, starting in 2008, that had put many projects on hold. As the economy began to improve even very slightly, the pent-up demand to fix deteriorating buildings seemed to be driving an increase in spending. School construction in 2013 continued to climb very slightly (increasing about $400 million over 2012) but last year it was the completion of new buildings that drove the increase. Spending for completed new school buildings rose $1.4 billion from 2012 when it was at a 16-year low, while spending for additions and retrofit fell back. Why new schools rather than improvement to existing ones? Without interviewing leaders in districts across the nation, one can only speculate based on analysis of infor-