Caution over RIBA data collected before Ukraine invasion

Architects across all sectors expect workloads to grow in the coming months for the first time since the pandemic began.

RIBA’s Future Trends survey for February found architects were positive about workloads over the next three months, although the institute warned the crisis in Ukraine could mean this will be short-lived.

All sectors, practice sizes and regions demonstrated a positive outlook, with 32% of practices overall expecting workloads to increase. Just 10% of practices said they expected workloads to decrease, while 58% expect them to stay the same.

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Optimism has soared among architects but worries about the impact of the Ukraine war have hit confidence

The surge in optimism – which showed signs of slowing in the first month of the year – has continued apace, with the overall workload index growing five points to +23.

But Adrian Malleson, RIBA’s head of economic research and analysis, said the data had been collected prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and warned that “the picture of economic stability might be short-lived”.

He said the conflict would compound existing supply and inflation issues, adding that rapidly increasing energy prices demonstrated the need for the UK to implement a “well-funded and designer-led retrofit programme”.

The private housing sector climbed three points to +23, while the community sector rose to +10 and both the public and community sector showed slightly increases to +1.

The North of England (+31); Wales and the West (+22); South of England (+14); and Midlands and East Anglia (+3) all remained in positive territory, while London saw a boom in confidence, rising from +16 to +40, its highest balance in two years.

The capital also demonstrated the strongest appetite for recruitment, with 26% of practices saying they expected to employ more permanent staff in the next three months.

Across the UK, the vast majority (80%) of practices said they expected permanent staffing levels to remain the same, with 15% saying they expected to employ more and only 4% expecting to employ fewer.

Recruitment remained highest among medium and large-sized practices with more than 11 staff.