Three long-delayed Oahu public housing redevelopment projects took big steps forward last week and could produce 554 new homes in 2026 and 911 more in 2028.
The Hawaii Public Housing Authority has taken on the monumental task of taking its inventory from 1,187 units to an additional 10,880, announcing Monday that it has chosen a developer for its Ka Lei Momi Redevelopment Project at nine existing housing properties over the next decade and beyond.
For about a year now Kamehameha Schools and its developer Highridge Costa have been shopping around a plan to build a mixed-use project that includes two 20-story towers of low-income rentals in Waipahu.