The annual index places London, Zurich, Munich, and Copenhagen behind Geneva in the top five, with New York City, San Francisco, Dublin, Bristol, and Philadelphia rounding out the top ten. While these rankings remain consistent, the broader investment landscape is evolving. Developers are moving away from purely inflation-driven planning toward the deployment of capital into high-performing, complex assets like data centers, laboratories, and advanced manufacturing facilities.
Edel Christie, Global President of Places at Arcadis, noted that construction cost no longer functions as a simple price tag. Instead, it serves as a convergence point for capacity, risk, and investment confidence. In this environment, the ability to ensure project delivery has become a competitive advantage. Conversely, the least expensive markets—led by Bengaluru, Buenos Aires, and Delhi—face their own hurdles regarding infrastructure availability and supply-chain depth. For clients, the priority has shifted to securing speed-to-market and reliable procurement, as early cost planning now outweighs the benefits of low headline prices in volatile global markets.

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