Land Development Plans of Kamehameha Schools

The Aloha chapter met for its quarterly luncheon  meeting on December 7th at the Oahu Country Club to hear a presentation on future land development plans from Walter Thoemmes, Managing Director, Commercial Real Estate Division, of Kamehameha Schools (KS).  Formally known as the Bishop Estate, KS is a charitable trust created near the end of the 19th Century by Princess Bernice Puahi Bishop, last lineal descendant of Hawaii’s kings, for the education of native Hawaiians.  The res of the trust, presently valued at $11.5 billion, consists primarily of 15,000 acres of land together with some US mainland investments, $3.5 billion of which is commercial properties on about 275 sites.  The trust disburses about 4% of its valuation annually to the Kamehameha School campus, one of the largest private schools in the United States, and to various outreach venues for construction, managing and funding for native Hawaiian students.  Therefore a major goal is to invest and use the res of the trust to generate income for its primary educational mission. KS also sees as part of its mission the preservation and creation of economic opportunity and lifestyle for its graduates.  The principal real estate development strategy currently being pursued by KS is an “urban strategy” to take advantage of investment and development opportunities at and around transit stops planned for Honolulu’s fixed guideway rapid transportation (HART) project currently under construction from its second city, Kapolei, near Pearl Harbor, to downtown Honolulu.  KS is developing regional partnerships which will provide for affordable housing and infrastructure as well as commercial development.  Giving its assets and nonprofit status, KS can well afford to continue to play a “long game” in developing its considerable real estate holdings, particularly on Oahu (Honolulu).”

David Callies, FAICP
Scribe/historian

 

 

KeyNotes

KeyNotes is the online publication of Lambda Alpha International and contains articles written by the members, chronicles chapter activities and successes, and celebrates member awards and accomplishments. Posts are distributed to the global membership and published within LAI’s social-media network. KeyNotes are submitted by LAI members. Many submissions reflect the author’s professional opinions and views on relevant issues concerning the organizational mission and purpose of LAI. LAI, as an organization, does not take a position on KeyNote submissions, and supports providing an open forum of ideas forwarded for thoughtful consideration. Submissions should not be construed as LAI endorsements.” Check out the latest articles today!

Current articles  |  Article archive

Article Submission Guidelines

Sponsors