But fees remain tight, RIBA survey adds
The number of staff being taken on by practices in the first three months of this year was 6% higher than the same period a year ago.
The figure from RIBA comes as the number of architects on the dole fell to a record low with the number signing on last month falling to 130 鈥 the smallest number since the ONS began including architects in its unemployment statistics back in January 2005.
RIBA鈥檚 latest Future Trends Workload Index was unchanged in last month, remaining at +35. Practices in London and the south of England are still the most confident about medium-term workloads.
Private housing and commercial work are the two sectors architects feel most positive about but they are less optimistic about when public sector workloads will recover 鈥 the score for public sector work fell to just +3.
RIBA director of practice Adrian Dobson said: 鈥淭he overall picture is still one in which confidence levels amongst architects about future workloads are high. The rising staffing index indicates a strong feeling that the current market for architectural services is stable or growing for the vast majority of practices.鈥
But he warned: 鈥淭here remains widespread reporting of intense fee competition in many sectors, along with tight profit margins.鈥
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