Starts in the three months to March fell 7% against the preceding three months and were 6% lower than a year ago, according to the latest Glenigan Index.

Residential starts were 10% lower than a year ago and 9% down on the preceding three months.Β Non-residential project starts were 7% lower than a year ago due to falls in both private and public sector funded work.

Civil engineering starts rose 17% against the preceding three months and were 17% up on a year ago.

The value of work starting on site during the first quarter of 2019 was 6% lower than a year earlier; starts were also 7% down against the previous three months on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Allan WilΓ©n, Glenigan’s economics director, said: β€œPrivate residential starts during the three months to March were 8% down on the same period a year ago. On a seasonally adjusted basis starts were 6% lower than during the final three of 2018. Project starts have progressively declined since last autumn against a backdrop of fewer property transactions and weaker house price inflation in the wider housing market.

β€œPolitical and economic uncertainties are expected to continue to dampen housing market activity and private housing project starts in the near term. Social housing starts fell 15% both against the three months to December and a year ago.

β€œOverall non-residential projects dropped 9% against the preceding three months on a seasonally adjusted basis and were 7% lower than a year ago. Private sector starts have weakened with industrial, office and retail work falling during the first quarter by 5%, 4% and 10% respectively against a year ago. There were also falls in government funded sectors. Education starts were 19% down on a year ago, while the health and community and amenity sectors dropped 4% and 22% respectively. The hotel and leisure sector was a bright spot, rising 18% year on year.”

While most parts of the UK saw falls in the value of project starts against a year ago, starts rose in the southern half of England, with London, the south east and south west seeing increases of 13%, 12% and 19% respectively.

Regionally the sharpest fall was in the east of England, with starts declining by 35%. The north east, north west, West Midlands and Scotland also all saw declines of 20% or more against a year ago.