In this episode of Lifting the Line, Andy Shaw, founder of Brickies Network and the Bricklayers Association Australia, explains why the National Bricklayers Summit is being held in every capital city this February and why the future of the bricklaying trade depends on it.
With the average age of bricklayers now close to 50 and workforce numbers having fallen by almost a third over the past 30 years, the industry is facing a serious skills and business sustainability crisis. At the same time, brickwork is shifting back toward high-end architectural and face brick construction, requiring higher levels of skill and experience, just as many of the most experienced tradesmen approach retirement.Andy unpacks how the industry has changed, from increased compliance and employment obligations, to rising costs, tighter margins and the growing pressure on small bricklaying businesses compared to larger crews. He also explains why each state faces different challenges, from infrastructure-driven labour shortages in Queensland, to boom-and-bust cycles in Western Australia, to pricing pressure and alternative cladding in South Australia, and the skills gap in architectural brickwork across New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.
The conversation explores why the National Bricklayers Summit is focused not only on technical skills, but on business systems, compliance, contracts, marketing, employment, apprenticeships and long-term sustainability. Andy also outlines how Brickies Network is working alongside major industry stakeholders to support bricklaying business owners with education, documentation, systems and buying power, so they can build profitable, compliant businesses that can train the next generation and keep the trade alive for decades to come.