Housing construction in the Twin Cities doubled last year, signaling the end of the worst construction slowdown in generations and the beginning of a historic apartment boom for the city of Minneapolis.
Still, the recovery has far to go, as home building remains well below the long-term average.
During 2012, builders and developers got permits to build 9,035 units in the 13-county metro, a 99.5 percent increase over the previous year. That included permits to build 4,058 single-family homes and 4,977 multifamily units, according to a year-end report from the Builders Association of the Twin Cities.
"It was the year the housing market came back to life," said Ryan Jones, director of the Twin Cities office of MetroStudy, a national company that tracks new for-sale housing across the country.
Indeed, the housing crash and Great Recession hit the construction industry particularly hard as demand for new houses ground to a near-halt by 2011, causing painful layoffs and some of the state's best-known companies to go out of business.
Ironically, it was the housing downturn itself that helped lead the construction turnaround. As housing prices plummeted and sales slowed, demand for rental apartments soared, creating a refreshed market for developers and contractors that had been idled by the downturn. Even as housing construction was sliding to record lows, apartment developers were ramping up with plans to build thousands of new apartments.
Of the nearly 10,000 planned units for the metro, 55 percent of them were for multifamily housing, mostly rental housing in a handful of Minneapolis neighborhoods coveted by young professionals and empty-nesters who prefer the flexibility that comes with renting.
"We have been as busy over the last 18 months as we have ever been," said Brent Rogers of Greco Development. "This is in stark contrast to three years ago, when next to no new development was going on."