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South Florida General Contractors Scramble To Navigate New Labor, Tariff Reality

In this episode of Condo Capitalism™, general contractor Kevin Calienes discusses the current state of the South Florida construction industry where some laborers are asking as much as $300 per day.

Condo Capitalism™ is a weekly podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ that provides data-driven analysis on distressed real estate—foreclosures, shortsales and bank-owned REOs—in the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach.

The program tracks the Florida Condo Association Financial Cliff, where rising maintenance fees, special assessments and insurance costs are squeezing cash-strapped owners.

On the show, experts analyze how the national “two-sided risk”—rising inflation and falling employment—magnifies these local pressures, potentially forcing a capitulation by owners who can no longer afford condo living.

Join Peter Zalewski at MiamiCondo.Club for a livestream every weekday at 4 pm (Miami time). On-demand recordings of all shows are available here.

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Episode Overview

In the Jan. 29, 2026, episode of the Condo Capitalism™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews general contractor Kevin Calienes of Khaos Construction in Coral Gables regarding the intensifying financial pressures facing South Florida development sites.

The discussion centers on a market where laborers realizing they are in great demand are now asking for more money, with some setting a new $300 daily labor floor for skilled trades.

While existing fixed-price contracts force general contractors to absorb the brunt of rising material tariffs, new project proposals are undergoing a necessary recalibration to reflect 2026 prices.

During the 62-minute discussion, Calienes details a landscape where the cost of essential building materials like copper wiring has more than tripled, forcing a shift in how contractors bid and budget for future developments.

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The reality of building in Miami is changing as the basic costs for workers and supplies seem to move higher every month.

Homeowners and developers are finding that the old prices they used to pay for simple renovations or new houses are disappearing.

A shrinking pool of available laborers has turned traditional masonry into a bottleneck that is now too slow and too expensive for the local market.

As fewer workers are available to lay heavy concrete blocks, project timelines are stretching and costs are rising.

To keep projects moving along, Calienes said he is increasingly recommending faster, high-tech ways to build that require less manpower.

This inflationary environment is driving a shift toward alternative building technologies like Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) systems, which replace traditional masonry with high-efficiency foam and concrete bunkers.

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The method allows a three-man crew to erect a 2,000 square foot structure in roughly four weeks. Traditional concrete block construction often requires two months or more to reach the same point in the construction.

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