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Honolulu’s construction crane count continues to rise, Rider Levett Bucknall report says

February 4, 2015 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

Construction cranes are signs of economic prosperity in Honolulu.

Construction cranes are signs of economic prosperity in Honolulu.

The number of construction cranes increasing in Honolulu can be attributed to the much publicized uptick in residential activity in the Kakaako neighborhood.

Tower crane counts dotting Honolulu’s skyline increased to 16 at the most recent count in November from 13 in August, according to the inaugural edition of Rider Levett Bucknall’s North American Crane Index.

Residential projects account for 53 percent of the tower cranes in Honolulu, with large commercial projects representing 33 percent of the total cranes, the report said.

Health care and hospitality projects make up a smaller percentage of the total crane amount.

While a couple of tower cranes have come down in the last six months as residential high-rise projects are completed, several more developments have begun and the pipeline of projects is likely to result in additional cranes during the next 18 months, Rider Levett Bucknall said.

The international firm known for providing property and construction consultancy advice at all stages of the construction cycle projects that the residential project growth will continue to increase both in the number and percentage of residential tower cranes based on recent ground breakings and piling activities in Honolulu.

The RLB Crane Index, which is published biannually, tracks the number of fixed cranes in major cities across North America.

Local RLB offices count the fixed tower cranes using three techniques, including a physical count, surveying its staff and contacting crane suppliers.

The crane index began in Australia in 2012 and now includes New Zealand, Southern Africa, the Middle East and North America.

The January 2015 North America report said that residential projects in Boston, Chicago, Denver, Honolulu, Los Angeles, New York and Seattle are responsible for the majority of cranes dominating the city skylines.

Of these locations, the majority of residential projects going up are mostly condominium and apartment developments.

With new construction developments emerging, along with an increase of redevelopment, renovation and expansion projects, Rider Levett Bucknall anticipates that tower cranes across North America will continue to increase throughout 2015.

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Blog, New Condo Construction Tagged With: new condo construction, New Condos

Avalon to break ground on $165M Hawaii Kai residential project

October 23, 2014 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

This rendering shows the plan for the 7000 Hawaii Kai residential rental project.

This rendering shows the plan for the 7000 Hawaii Kai residential rental project.

Honolulu-based Avalon Development Co. LLC is set to begin construction Friday on a $165 million Hawaii Kai residential rental project that was first planned as a luxury condominium project by a South Korean developer, and has had starts and stops during the last several years.

The cost to develop the project is pegged at $108 million, but with the land cost penciled in, the total cost of it is $165 million, Christine Camp, president and CEO of Avalon, told PBN.

Originally called the Hale Ka Lae condominium, the project at 7000 Hawaii Kai Drive, which includes two 10-story buildings and a parking structure on nearly four acres of land, is now being called 7000 Hawaii Kai.

There will be a total of 269 units at both market-rate and affordable rates.

Avalon Development was contracted in December by the landowner, South Korea-based Hanwha Engineering and Construction, to develop, redesign and obtain financing for the project. The developer is holding a groundbreaking ceremony on Friday at 10:30 a.m. at the 7000 Hawaii Kai Drive site.

Rents for the affordable portion of the project will range between $1,475 per month to $2,200 per month, while rents for the market-rate units will range from $2,200 per month to $3,700 per month. The rents include maintenance fees.

The developer said that it should finish the project in about 16 months, which would mean the second quarter of 2016.

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

Filed Under: Featured Blog, Hawaii Kai, New Condo Construction, New Condos for sale Tagged With: new condo construction

Korean developer plans 234-unit condo behind Hawaii’s Ala Moana Center

June 9, 2014 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Korean developer plans 234-unit condo behind Hawaii’s Ala Moana Center

The South Korean developer that purchased a 1.4-acre lot behind Ala Moana Center in Honolulu in 2007 told the Hawaii Community Development Authority that it plans to build a 234-unit condominium tower on the site that would integrate with the city’s planned rail station.

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reports a consultant for SamKoo Development Co. Ltd. told the HCDA this week that the developer is offering the city a narrow piece of its property along Kona Street for the rail line and wold like to incorporate commercial and public space on the tower site at 1391 Kapiolani Blvd. to blend with the rail station, which will be the terminus of the 20-mile line that starts in Kapolei.

T he newspaper reports that within the next few months, SamKoo plans to submit a permit application under interim transit-oriented development rules pending before the Honolulu City Council.

The South Korean investors paid $26 million — or $417 per square foot, a record at that time— for the former Motor Supply Ltd. lot in 2007, but never built a planned luxury condo tower.

 

Staff Pacific Business News

Filed Under: Featured Blog, Hawaii Community Development Authority, New Condo Construction, New Condos for sale Tagged With: new condo construction

Honolulu condominium project revived after seven years on the shelf

May 30, 2014 By idx guys Leave a Comment

photo3-600xx390-585-70-0Honolulu condominium project revived after seven years on the shelf

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

Plans for a nearly 140-unit mid-rise residential condominium called Skyline Honolulu, to be built on the slopes of Punchbowl crater on Prospect Street in Honolulu, have been revived after about seven years on the shelf by the developer, an affiliate of Honolulu-based Form Partners LLC confirmed to Pacific Business News.

Form Partners is the same developer for several Hawaii projects including The Vanguard Lofts in Honolulu and Robertson Properties’ $767 million planned mixed-use project on the former Kamehameha Drive-in Theater in Aiea, which was just approved this week by Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell.

Bill Deuchar, a partner of U.S. Pacific Development LLC, an affiliated company of Form Partners, for which he is also an advisor, told PBN that a much improved economy today is the main reason why the project has been revisited.

Additionally, he pointed out that Skyline Honolulu has been scaled back to offer a lower price point, although no price points have been set yet.

“[The project] may wind up being a rental apartment building or we may put it up as a for-sale project,” Deuchar said. “The way I see the market, I see so much high-end stuff. I’d rather be fighting it out in the lower-end rather than the higher-end. Our project is more community-oriented.”

He did not specify a cost to develop the project, although he noted that if it sells all of the units, it could fetch about $60 million.

The five-story project, which will include studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments, is anticipated to start construction in the first quarter of 2015 with a completion scheduled for 14 to 16 months after that.

Honolulu-based Richard Matsunaga & Associates Architects Inc. and U.S. Pacific Development were chosen to design and build the project, Deuchar said.

He estimated that it should create up to 200 construction jobs, but that some entitlements are still needed to get the project going.

Prospect Properties LLC, an affiliate of Form Partners, bought and consolidated 1.6-acres of land on the slopes of Punchbowl in 2007.

But since then, the project has not made any major moves towards development.

The consolidated purchase included five different owners/sellers of nine separate parcels made up of 12 single- and multi-family structures with nearly 20 tenants.

U.S. Pacific Development handled the acquisition, financing and the design of what was then a 95-plus unit, four-story mid-rise building made up of one-, two- and three-bedroom residences with a pool, recreation room, rooftop decks, a community rooftop deck, recreational areas and underground parking.

The company, at that time, estimated that the total project sales were expected to exceed $80 million.

U.S. Pacific Development said that it has secured agreements with the Punchbowl Special Design District, addressing community concerns and attaining all required impact studies necessary to get the special design district permit for the area.

Filed Under: Featured Blog, New Condo Construction Tagged With: Form Partners LLC, new condo construction, New Condos, new construction

Developer gets $120M loan for Kakaako high rise

November 20, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

By Associated Press

POSTED: 12:27 p.m. HST, Nov 11, 2013

A developer planning a high-rise project near downtown Honolulu says it has secured a $120 million construction loan and plans to start building this month.

Developer gets $120M loan for Kakaako high rise

Developer gets $120M loan for Kakaako high rise

Developer Oliver McMillan said today it secured the loan for its 3.5-acre Symphony Honolulu project from lenders including First Hawaiian Bank. Three other lenders are also involved.

The project is in Kakaako, east of downtown Honolulu. Plans call for a tall, glass skyscraper with 288 market-priced condominiums and 100 lower-priced units for buyers who meet certain conditions set by the Hawaii Community Development Authority.

Officials say the project will generate about 400 construction jobs for the next two years and about 100 permanent jobs.

The project is expected to be completed in 2015.

Filed Under: Featured Blog, Kakaako, Luxury Condos for sale, Symphony Honolulu Tagged With: Kakaako, new condo construction, Symphony Honolulu

Stanford Carr’s Kakaako condo project would add 600 residential units, commercial space

July 23, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Jul 23, 2013, 7:01am HST
Duane Shimogawa  |  Reporter- Pacific Business News

Stanford Carr Development is planning to build a mixed-use high-rise residential project in Kakaako that would include 600 residential units, including townhomes, live-work units, rental apartments and ground floor commercial space.

It will be located in an empty parking lot along South Street, adjacent to Carr’s Halekauwila rental development and bounded by Halekauwila and Pohukaina streets as well as South and Keawe streets.

This map shows the location of Stanford Carr Development's planned 600-unit mixed-use project in Kakaako.

This map shows the location of Stanford Carr Development’s planned 600-unit mixed-use project in Kakaako.

The project involves landowner Kamehameha Schools and the Hawaii Community Development Authority, the state agency charged with overseeing development in areas such as Kakaako.

A Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation rail transit station is located right near this planned development but Carr declined comment on the prospects of it being a part of the new residential project.

“We’re trying to integrate everything,” Carr told PBN. “We challenged ourselves to go before agencies and say, ‘let’s collaborate.’”

PBN first reported this planned development, which will most likely include a neighborhood grocery store as one of its ground-floor commercial components.

Carr told PBN that the project is expected to include a total of 600 units, with 400 units for sale and 200 rental units.

Gov. Neil Abercrombie, Paul Kay, director of real estate development for Kamehameha Schools, and Carr are expected to make an official announcement regarding the project on Friday.

The development is part of Kamehameha Schools’ “Our Kakaako” master plan, which includes 29 acres on nine city blocks, seven residential towers that include 2,750 units and 300,000 square feet of commercial space.

Search properties for sale at KakaakoProperties.com

 

Filed Under: Hawaii Community Development Authority, Kakaako, Kamehameha Schools, New Condos for sale Tagged With: Hawaii Community Development Authority, Honolulu high rise, Kakaako, Kamehameha Schools, new condo construction, New Condos

Ritz-Carlton Waikiki project 85 percent sold

June 30, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Stephanie Silverstein  |  Reporter- Pacific Business News

More than 85 percent of the 309 luxury condominium units at The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Waikiki Beach are sold, following a private, invitation-only weekend sale event, developer Pacrep LLC announced Tuesday.

More than 85 percent of the 309 luxury condominium units at The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Waikiki Beach, seen here in this rendering, are sold, following a private, invitation-only weekend sale event.

More than 85 percent of the 309 luxury condominium units at The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Waikiki Beach, seen here in this rendering, are sold, following a private, invitation-only weekend sale event.

The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Waikiki Beach is a 38-story hotel condominium project at 2121 Kuhio Ave., under development by Pacrep LLC with an expected completion date in early 2016.

The sale event was held simultaneously on Saturday in Waikiki, Tokyo and Shanghai, and broadcast through a live webcast, making it possible for potential buyers across the world to participate. More than 8,500 people participated in the webcast.

“We are very pleased with the positive response we have received in such a short time period,” Jason Grosfeld, Pacrep LLC representative said in a statement. “The success of this weekend’s event further reinforces that, for our buyers, Ritz-Carlton is by far their top choice.”

The units range from studios to three bedrooms and penthouses. Amenities include resort pools, a spa and a fitness center.

The remaining units available for purchase through the Pacrep’s sales team range in price from $750,000 to $15 million.

The sales event kicked off with an announcement that sushi restaurant Sushi Sho will open its first location outside of Japan at The Ritz-Carlton Residences project, and that ESquared Hospitality will open BLT Market, a farm-to-table restaurant on the lobby level of the building.

New York-based gourmet market Dean & DeLuca also plans to open its first store in Hawaii in The Ritz-Carlton Residences.

“The addition of The Residences along with our exciting food and beverage partners will further secure Waikiki’s position as a world-class destination and establish this as the premier neighborhood within Waikiki,” Grosfeld said.

Filed Under: Featured Blog, Luxury Condos for sale, Luxury real estate, luxury real estate Oahu, New Condos for sale, Waikiki Tagged With: new condo construction, New Condos, Ritz-Carlton Residences

Condo Mania! – Jun 03, 2013 (The Honolulu Star-Advertiser – McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX

June 6, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

makikiLanikea. Hokua. Ko’olani. Capitol Place. Keola La’i. Moana Pacific. The Watermark. Allure Waikiki. Pacifica Honolulu. Holomua.

These condominium towers in Honolulu were the product of the last real estate market boom, which prompted developers to build close to 4,000 new units in more than a dozen towers that also included The Pinnacle, 909 Kapiolani and 215 N. King.

So is it shocking that developers are now planning to push out an even bigger number of high-rise homes — almost 5,000, including 1,000 rental units — in Oahu’s urban core?

To some observers it’s hard to imagine demand meeting such a supply.

But developers, along with a local economist and a real estate market analyst, contend that all the projects planned to date won’t produce a glut.

“It’s not a question of will there be enough buyers,” said economist Paul Brewbaker of Honolulu-based TZ Economics. “The problem is, will there be enough condos?”

Local real estate market analyst Ricky Cassiday said there may be two or three more towers in addition to what’s already been announced that conceivably could succeed in the market.

“We’re at this amazing moment in the cycle where everything is perfect,” he said.

Brewbaker and Cassiday say factors supporting a new boom in Honolulu high-rise housing development include record tourism that translates to lots of visiting prospective second-home buyers, a dearth of home construction in recent years, a strengthening economy and low interest rates.

Cassiday said 5,000 units sounds like a lot, but in his view there is enough diversification among the projects in terms of timing, pricing and occupancy (owning versus renting) to satisfy demand.

Relatively little current home construction in Oahu’s suburbs and the promise of the city’s planned rail line running near several of the announced tower projects are other factors that lead Cassiday to conclude that this building wave of new high-rise housing in Honolulu will be bigger than the last one.

Developers cite the response from buyers to the first three tower projects to hit this upward market cycle: Waihonua at Kewalo, One Ala Moana and 801 South St.

The first was Waihonua, a tower on Queen Street at the base of Pensacola Street that local developer Alexander & Baldwin Inc. started selling and building toward the end of last year.

A&B recently reported that 321 of the tower’s 341 units, which are priced between $375,000 and $1.9 million, were sold as of May 8, including 302 binding contracts that generated $33 million in nonrefundable deposits for A&B. Waihonua is slated to be completed by March 2015.

The second project was One Ala Moana, a 210-unit luxury tower atop the Nordstrom store parking garage at Ala Moana Center where units are priced from $583,000 to $9 million.

About 400 prospective buyers lined up in December for half those units made available publicly, while much of the other half was sold in Japan. All units sold, and construction began earlier this year on the project by local development firms MacNaughton Group and Kobayashi Group in partnership with Howard Hughes Corp.

At 801 South, buyers snapped up all 635 units priced between $253,200 and $501,300 in March, leaving about 300 lottery entrants empty-handed. Demolition began recently to prepare the site for construction of the project led by local affordable housing developer Marshall Hung.

Perhaps not surprisingly, A&B, MacNaughton/Kobayashi and Hung produced the initial towers during the last market upswing — Lanikea in Waikiki, Hokua in Kakaako and 215 N. King near Chinatown, respectively.

The next condo tower expected to launch sales is Symphony Honolulu, a 388-unit project on the mauka-Ewa corner of Ward Avenue and Kapiolani Boulevard, this summer.

After that, competition will become tighter with five more towers, all of which recently applied for permits from the state agency governing development in Kakaako, the Hawaii Community Development Authority.

Hughes Corp., the Texas-based owner of Ward Centers, plans three of the five with 900 units at its Ward property. Prices and names for the towers have yet to be specified, though one tower will be moderately priced to satisfy HCDA rules.

A&B plans one tower at the former site of a CompUSA store at the corner of South Street and Ala Moana Boulevard. This project with 466 units that include some townhomes is named The Collection. Unit prices range from the high $300,000s to the mid-$700,000s.

California-based Developer Franco Mola plans the fifth tower, just Diamond Head of Imperial Plaza on Waimanu Street near Cooke Street. This project, called 803 Waimanu, features 217 units priced from $249,000 to $586,000.

A sixth condo tower is planned on the outer edge of Waikiki on the Central YMCA property. This project, called Aloha Kai, is slated for 128 units and is seeking a zoning change from the city.

Also added to the whole condo mix are two rental towers. One, called Halekauwila Place, with 204 units, is under construction by local developer Stanford Carr. The other, called 690 Pohukaina, slated for 804 units, is planned by Ohio-based Forest City Enterprises Inc., which is negotiating with HCDA on a development agreement to build the project on state land.

“There’s a tremendous amount of demand for new housing,” said Ann Bouslog, longtime isle housing market analyst who recently joined Forest City as its development manager.

Cassiday predicts that the optimal window for delivering new residential high-rise projects in Honolulu is 2015 to 2017. Given that construction takes two years for a typical tower, that means starting within the next two years.

Brewbaker recently told a local business group that included a panel of developers that they will wish they had produced a new residential building before 2018.

As often happens, there may be more than one project that misses the upswing and either doesn’t get off the ground or gets caught in mid-development when demand disappears.

During the last boom there were at least seven towers with about 1,800 units announced that didn’t get developed. They included 1723 Kalakaua, which opened a sales office in 2008, another one nearby and a tower called Ko’olua next to Ko’olani in Kakaako.

Because lenders generally require developers to presell a substantial number of units before construction may start, a lack of demand can naturally limit how many planned projects break ground.

Permitting can also be a challenge. A&B pursued three towers in Kakaako Makai next to Kakaako Waterfront Park during the last boom, but that plan was derailed by public opposition and the Legislature.

Two projects that were under construction at the tail end of the last boom, Moana Vista and Allure Waikiki, failed and were taken over by lenders and then later revived by new developers. In Moana Vista’s case the tower became Pacifica Honolulu and was finished by San Diego-based Oliver McMillan, which is developing Symphony Honolulu with partner JN Automotive.

___ (c)2013 The Honolulu Star-Advertiser Visit The Honolulu Star-Advertiser at
www.staradvertiser.com Distributed by MCT Information Services

Filed Under: Featured Blog, Honolulu, New Condos for sale, New Homes, Oahu Communities, Oahu condos for sale Tagged With: new condo construction, new construction

Three condo towers, 900 units, in first phase of Howard Hughes Corp.’s Ward master plan

May 25, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

May 21, 2013, 9:44am HST Updated: May 21, 2013, 1:50pm HST
Duane Shimogawa  |  Reporter- Pacific Business News

The Howard Hughes Corp. plans to add more than 900 residential units in two market-rate condominium towers and one mostly affordable residential tower as part of the first phase of its Ward Village master plan in Honolulu’s Kakaako neighborhood.

This rendering shows The Howard Hughes Corp.'s planned market-rate condominium towers, which located diagonally across the street from each other at the corner of Auahi and Kamakee streets, part of the developer's Ward Village master-planned community.

This rendering shows The Howard Hughes Corp.’s planned market-rate condominium towers, which located diagonally across the street from each other at the corner of Auahi and Kamakee streets, part of the developer’s Ward Village master-planned community.

David Striph, senior vice president of Hawaii for Dallas-based Howard Hughes Corp. (NYSE: HHC) said Tuesday that the developer is in the process of renovating the iconic IBM Building into a new information center and sales gallery as part of its first phase of the 60-acre urban master planned community that would eventually double the retail, dining and entertainment space in Kakaako.

Ninety percent of the units in a 415-unit tower planned for 404 Ward Ave., which would include commercial space and parking, would be affordable, with the rest market rate.

Nick Vanderboom, senior vice president of development for The Howard Hughes Corp., said that the two market rate towers — one planned for a surface parking lot across from the Consolidated Theatres Ward Stadium 16 and the other at the current Pier 1 Imports location diagonally across the street — will have a total of 500 units. Pier 1 Imports (NYSE: PIR) will be relocated to another spot to accommodate the tower.

Vanderboom said that one tower will have 300 units and the other will have 200 units, but the price ranges for both are still being worked out.

Visit www.KakaakoProperties.com for more Kaka’ako information

The plan is to build the out the first phase concurrently with the affordable tower being the first application submitted to the Hawaii Community Development Authority. A hearing for the project is scheduled for next month.

Vanderboom says he expects that it will submit applications for the other projects some time this summer.

Groundbreaking for the first phase is scheduled for early next year with an expected finish date in early 2016, he said.

Howard Hughes Corp. has selected architects for the first phase, including an unidentified local firm, but has yet to choose general contractors for the first phase, Vanderboom said.

This first phase is expected to have an economic impact of $1.25 billion, create 9,000 direct and indirect jobs and add more than 1.5 million square feet as well as more than 900 residential units to Kakaako, which is being called “The Third City.”

Howard Hughes Corp. said that it has gone beyond many of the requirements for development under the master plan approved by the HCDA, noting that the towers in the first phase will have a mauka-makai orientation, which will showcase the views for residents while preserving the skyline for others.

The company also plans to build more than three times the required affordable housing in the first phase and new buildings along Ala Moana Boulevard will be set back to create a “greenbelt lined with townhouses.”

Ward’s approved master plan allows for up to 9.3 million total square feet of mixed-use development, including more than 4,000 residential units and about 1.5 million square feet of retail and other commercial space, said David Weinreb, CEO of Howard Hughes, in a letter to shareholders in March.

He noted that Ward Village has development rights for 22 high-rise towers in an urban master-planned community setting. Ward Village’s transformation is scheduled to happen throughout the next decade.

Visit www.KakaakoProperties.com for more Kaka’ako information

Filed Under: Ala Moana - Kakaako, Featured Blog, Howard Hughes Corp, Kakaako, Luxury Condos for sale, Luxury real estate, luxury real estate Oahu, New Condos for sale Tagged With: Howard Hughes Corp, Kakaako, new condo construction, new construction

California developer Franco Mola plans to build workforce housing in Kakaako

April 3, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Duane Shimogawa  |  Reporter- Pacific Business News
Apr 2, 2013, 1:54pm HST

A California-based real estate developer is planning to demolish several existing single-story industrial buildings and develop a 20-story, 217-unit workforce housing condominium project with ground-floor retail space in the Kakaako neighborhood in Honolulu.

The property, at 803 Waimanu St., encompasses a little more than 21,000 square feet.

It was once on the market for $4.8 million, according to the commercial real estate property website LoopNet.

The planned project also includes parking for 245 vehicles.

According to the plans, there will be no amenities and the ground floor may include a convenience store such as a 7-Eleven.

“It seems like these types of projects are catching on,” Hawaii Community Development Authority Director of Planning and Development Deekpak Neupane told PBN. “I think as far as affordable housing goes, it’s a good project.”

It will include studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units. Neupane says that a two-bedroom unit would go for about $350,000.

Construction is slated to begin in the first quarter of next year and be done in 24 months.

The HCDA has scheduled a public hearing at which the developer, Franco Mola’s MJF Development Corp., will present its plans on May 1 with decision-making scheduled for June 5.

MJF Development could not be reached for comment.

Mola is no stranger to the Hawaii market, as he once had plans to redevelop the former Honolulu Advertiser property on Kapiolani Boulevard into a two-tower commercial and residential complex, which is now a project headed up by Hawaii developer Marshall Hung.

Kakaako Properties For Sale

Filed Under: Ala Moana - Kakaako, Condos for sale Oahu, Kakaako, Pacific Business News Tagged With: condos for sale, Kakaako, new condo construction, New Condos

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