A local investment firm and a local developer have teamed up to produce multiple Hawaii affordable-housing projects, starting with a rental tower in Makiki for low-income households.
The partnership between Tradewind Capital Group and Stanford Carr Development recently received state financing commitments to fund nearly all of the estimated $148 million cost to build their initial tower.
Kaloa Robinson, a SCD development manager, told board members of the Hawaii Housing Finance and Development Corp. at an Aug. 14 meeting that SCD and Tradewind aim to build a lot more affordable housing in a team effort to address a chronic shortage statewide.
“Our mission together is to deliver as many affordable-housing units as quickly as possible, ” he told the board of HHFDC, a state agency that helps finance affordable housing and approved funding for the 247-unit Makiki project named Melia on the mauka-Diamond Head corner of Piikoi and Young streets.
Apartments in the 23-story tower will be reserved for households earning no more than 60 % of the median annual income on Oahu, including 13 units for households earning up to 30 % of the median.
The higher income limit this year equates to $63, 840 for a single person, $72, 960 for a couple and $91, 200 for a family of four under HHFDC calculations.
Monthly rents will be tied to income limits for 66 years. Maximum rents this year could range from $669 for studios at the lower income limit to $2, 095 for three-bedroom units at the higher limit.
SCD has developed several low-income rental housing projects on Oahu, often with HHFDC financing, including Hale Kewalo, Halekauwila Place and Franciscan Vistas Ewa.
Robinson said SCD and Tradewind, which developed a moderate-priced condominium tower in Kakaako over a decade ago with another local developer, used their past experience to produce Melia without over-economizing on unit sizes.
Studios in the Makiki tower are to have 335 square of living space, while the size of three-bedroom units are slated to be 922 square feet. Planned amenities include a community meeting room, a fitness center and a laundry room. The tower also is to include an adjacent attached seven-story parking structure with 243 stalls.
State financing is helping subsidize the project’s cost, which equates to $600, 000 per unit on average.
HHFDC’s board unanimously agreed to provide $79 million in bond financing, which partly is to be paid off with proceeds from sales of state and federal tax credits worth $78 million also approved by HHFDC. The agency also agreed to provide the developers with a $34 million low-interest loan.
Additionally, the Honolulu City Council granted a package of zoning and fee exemptions to make the tower more financially feasible.
These benefits include waivers on building permit and wastewater system facility fees totaling $1.4 million, and a waiver on providing 20, 536 square feet of park space or $4.3 million in lieu of such park space.
The Council also allowed the tower to be nearly three times as dense as permitted under zoning rules and rise up to 210 feet, exceeding the area’s 150-foot limit.
Robinson noted that a couple other towers nearby on Piikoi Street, Pumehana and Hale Kalele, were allowed to rise about 200 feet.
Robinson also told HHFDC’s board the Melia project site is ideal for affordable housing, with an elementary school and many businesses, including restaurants, a medical center and two supermarkets, on adjacent or nearby blocks.
“It’s basically surrounded by all of the amenities that make affordable housing so perfect for this site, ” he said. “It basically makes perfect sense for affordable housing.”
Tradewind, which is part of Honolulu-based Tradewind Group that owns three insurance companies, bought two parcels comprising the project site in 2017 from the Lili ‘uokalani Trust and a local family trust for a combined $5.5 million, according to property records.
At the time, both parcels were bound by ground leases set to expire at the end of 2023. One parcel contained eight residential apartments built in 1954 and the other contained a 20-unit apartment complex built in 1969. Both structures were dilapidated, according to Robinson, and were demolished after the ground leases expired.
Robinson told HHFDC’s board the Melia tower is expected to break ground in early 2026 and open in early 2028.
“We look forward to delivering on our mission, which again is to just build as many affordable housing units as humanly possible as quick as possible, ” he said.