Full details of the office cost model and a breakdown of the costs over the past seven years are available on the CEEC
CEEC office cost model comparisons are expressed in Euros using exchange rates at the time the study was carried out (June 2019). Exchange rates, particularly Sterling, have been volatile in recent years against the backdrop of the UK’s negotiations to exit the EU.
The movement and fluctuation of exchange rates tends to distort how one country’s construction costs compare with another’s. BCIS has therefore compared the costs directly in the table below. The conversion factors are derived by dividing the costs, in local currencies, by the costs in a single country, also in local currency. The results are building cost exchange rates usually referred to as purchasing power parities (PPP). The PPPs are affected by any differential movement in construction costs between countries but not directly by fluctuations in exchange rates.
A known cost in one country can be expressed in equivalent cost in another country by multiplying by the factors in the rows (or dividing by the factors in the columns).
For example, a project costing €1m in Ireland would cost £940,000 in the UK, €1m in Finland, 21,530,000 Koruna in Czech Republic, etc. Similarly, a project costing 1bn Forint in Hungary would cost €2.48m in France, €2.75m in Netherlands, 3.8m Francs in Switzerland, etc. Purchasing power parties for construction works based on the CEEC office cost model 2019.