Manteca Building Tops $2.477 Billion In 5 Years

Manteca construction — based on city issued permits — hit a record $757 million in 2024. The 5,205 permits included 1,306 new single family home starts and the Manteca Crossing shopping center anchored by what will be Manteca’s second Food 4 Less breaking ground at Atherton Drive and Airport Way. Keep in mind the figures represent only private sector construction activity.

If you toss in two major Manteca Unified projects that broke ground that include two-story classroom buildings at the East Union and Manteca high school campuses — along with several major city street projects, construction activity started in Manteca last year pushed the $850 million mark. That reflects just the value of the construction.

Assuming the 1,306 homes will reflect average selling price of new homes built in Manteca during 2023, buyers will end up spending $875 million collectively buying the homes started in 2024. The impact of the new construction — and the ongoing economic activity 1,306 new households — are even higher. Economists apply a 7-fold multiplier effect on the overall economy from every $1 in new construction.

That represents not just the wages that are spent paid to those who mine, produce, and build construction projects but also auxiliary benefactors such as jobs in mortgage lending, title offices, and such. Some of that clearly stays in the Manteca area. The real big impact locally is the ongoing annual income of the 1,306 new households and the effect it will have on the Manteca economy.

The median household income in Manteca was $89,000 at the start of 2024.

That’s said, the buyers of new homes tend to have higher household incomes.

Certain segments of Manteca south of the 120 Bypass based on tracking of mortgage data, reflects new neighbors where the household income exceeds $100,000. Taking a lowball assumption of $90,000 for the income of each new household that will occupy the 1,306 homes, the overall household income will easily top $117.5 million on an annual basis.

Granted mortgage payments plus taxes and utilities will eat up a good share of the $117.5 million. But beyond that spending for everything from food, gasoline, entertainment, home improvement, furnishing, clothing, and such makes its way into the local and regional economies. During the past five years, Manteca has issued 22,701 permits for everything from spas and swimming pools to massive distribution centers, and apartment complexes.

The overall figure is $2.477 billion. That includes $376 million in 2020, $391 million in 2021, $528 million in 2022, $424 million in 2023, and $757 million in 2024. To put that in perspective, it took 13 years for overall Manteca building permit activity to reach a combined $1 billion between 1998 and 2010. Manteca had a combined $1.18 billion just in the past two years. The record for the biggest permitted project in Manteca still stands. That was $180 million for the 500-room Great Wolf hotel and indoor water resort that opened on June 29, 2021.

https://www.mantecabulletin.com/news/local-news/manteca-building-tops-2477-billion-in-5-years/

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