Fresh out of college in 2009, Nick Conniff found that his prospects for landing a housing design job were grim. The recession had set in, homebuilding had screeched to a halt and the architecture firms where he'd hoped to find work were slashing jobs.
"I honestly can't explain the frustration," he said. "I felt like I'd went to college for no reason."
He worked as a bartender and painted houses to make ends meet. And last summer, as he shopped for a house, he noticed sellers weren't budging on price, and that properties were selling as fast as they were being listed — a clue builders might be back in business.
His instincts were right. At a recent construction jobs fair in Minneapolis, more than 100 companies were on the hunt for workers. Conniff applied for 17 internships.
The shift in the housing market is leading to hiring in all segments of the construction industry — from the trucking companies that haul materials to the welders who make scaffolding. Residential construction activity has been increasing at a double-digit pace, and with buying options limited, homeowners have once again started investing in new bathrooms, kitchens and other remodeling projects.
But with the upside of fresh hiring comes the downside of a worker shortage and overall skills gap.
Nearly 50,000 of the state's 132,000 construction jobs evaporated during the housing crash, according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development. Many of those workers, frustrated with the dwindling possibilities in homebuilding, left the industry for other careers and never looked back.
"We lost a generation of people who have stopped looking for work in residential construction," said Marv McDaris, Minnesota division president for Pulte Homes.