You are hereconstruction sector
construction sector
The construction sector consists of the following areas:
- infrastructure, repair and maintenance;
- public and private housing;
- non-residential public property (e.g. hospitals and schools);
- industrial (e.g. factories and processing plant) and commercial construction.

- architecture - new builds, regeneration, conservation, commercial and redevelopment;
- civil and structural engineering - coastal and marine, environmental, geotechnical, structural, highways, bridges, rail, tunnelling, airports/ports, transport planning, power, water, public health, risk management and project management (crosses all sectors);
- construction and building services - construction management, design and build, facilities management and building services management;
- engineering construction - air, power, water, oil, gas and nuclear facilities, chemical process plants and infrastructure;
- surveying - building surveying, land surveying, quantity surveying, rural practice and hydrographic surveying.
What’s it like working in this sector?
Working environment
- variety;
- challenge;
- responsibility;
- intellectual stimulation;
- sense of satisfaction from contributing to the safety, efficiency and sustainability of the environment and developing world.
- high levels of responsibility early on;
- decision-making under pressure;
- meticulous attention to detail;
- multitasking under pressure.
The industry is trying to encourage a more diverse workforce through a range of developments such as the creation of employer diversity policies. Organisations such as ConstructionSkills are working to improve the number of non-traditional entrants to the sector.
Despite these measures, there has been little change in the number of women employed in construction compared with ten years ago (currently 11% of construction jobs are undertaken by women). Since 2000, there has only been a 1% increase in ethnic minority recruitment, which currently stands at 2.9% (Construction Statistics Annual Report 2006, Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR), June 2006).
- building services engineering;
- transportation and highways engineering;
- ground engineering;
- contaminated land specialists.
- Construction is a huge sector, employing 7% of the UK’s workforce (Construction Statistics Annual Report 2006, DTI, June 2006).
- In 2006, it provided 2.2 million jobs and that figure is expected to increase to over 2.8 million by 2011 (Blueprint for Construction Skills 2007-2011, Construction Skills Network, ConstructionSkills, February 2007). This figure is dependant on how well the industry recovers from the economic downturn in 2008/9.
- In 2006/07, construction companies offered 49 graduate vacancies per organisation
- Login to post comments
