PUʻUHONUA O WAIʻANAE IS BUILDING A VILLAGE ON THEIR OWN LAND!

We're more than half way there, but need your kokua to help bring our village home.

Video about Puʻuhoua O Waiʻanae here.

FROM TENTS TO HOMES

Some said it was a pipe dream, but 250 residents of the largest and oldest houseless community on Oʻahu bought 20 acres of private land in Waiʻanae. Mahalo nui loa for the hundreds of people around the world who made our first fundraising campaign a success!

Now, it's time to raise funds to complete construction of critical infrastructure, communal kitchens and bathrooms, and homes for our people.

Updated April 22, 2024

MORE THAN A "HOMELESS ENCAMPMENT"

For more than a decade, Puʻuhonua O Waiʻanae has provide a caring community, for people who have fallen through the cracks of the social services system. POW is a self-organized village of 250 people currently living houseless (aka homeless) at the Waiʻanae Boat Harbor. It is home to working families, kupuna, and people with disabilities. Two-thirds of its residents are Native Hawaiian. POW is built on an ethic of aloha and kuleana. Service is a part of daily life. Residents look after each others’ children, cook and eat together, and care for neighbors who are sick or disabled. They also serve the wider community with a food pantry that is free and open to the public, regular beach and park cleanups, and weekly outreach to share food and supplies with other houseless encampments across Oʻahu. The village is a model community in many ways, despite their lack of houses.

A REPLICABLE MODEL WITH LESSONS TO SHARE

The immediate and visual impact of POW Farm Village will be to establish a permanent home for the 250 residents of POW. However, there is another demonstrable benefit for all of us. When complete, the farm village can be a replicable model to deploy in our larger community’s fight against the dire challenge of houselessness throughout the state. Current POW villagers themselves are already advising other houseless communities elsewhere on Oʻahu today as they attempt to assemble and organize into their own self-help communities with a long-term eye toward residential security. Consider the communal design and self-help approach to building homes dramatically reduces development costs because bathrooms, kitchens, and related infrastructure are shared. It also reduces operating costs because POW will perform its own security, grounds keeping and light maintenance, as they already do today. These savings translate into truly affordable rents that houseless people can afford without first having to obtain scarce vouchers or other subsidies.

 

CONSTRUCTION UPDATES

 

JOIN US

Join us and help demonstrate the power of a new model of affordable living, built on a strong sense of community, and rooted in aloha. Help us bring the people of Puʻuhonua O Waiʻanae home.

 

MAHALO TO OUR GENEROUS DONORS!

Alexander & Baldwin

Andrew Ogawa

Anonymous Donors

Central Pacific Bank

Clarence TC Ching Foundation

Colbert & Gail Matsumoto

DR Horton Hawaii

First Hawaiian Bank

Grassroots from GoFundMe

Harry & Jeanette Weinberg Foundation

Hawaiian Community Lending

Island Insurance Foundation

Kataly Foundation

Lily Cabinatan

REITWay Foundation

Robert & Melissa Bruhl

Schuler Family Foundation

State Grant-In-Aid

The Jones Family Foundation

The Pietsch Family

Toby and Tracy Tonaki

Ward Villages Foundation Fund

Wayne Pitluck & Judy Pyle

William & Eva Price

Zilber Family Foundation


 

UPDATES FROM OUR SOCIAL MEDIA - @ALOHALIVESHERE