LAHAINA, Maui - A community of 167 brightly colored temporary homes for wildfire survivors was completed this week on a Lahaina hillside where no housing existed a few months ago. The final modular home at the Kilohana group housing site, developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, was installed and is ready for occupancy. HomeAid Hawaii, a nonprofit best known for building tiny houses, or kauhale, for homeless people, is managing development.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem approved Hawaii's request to extend Federal Emergency Management Agency temporary housing assistance for Maui wildfire survivors until February 2027, Green said in a news release. FEMA did not immediately respond to requests for confirmation of the extension.
FEMA said the modular homes have been built to last at least 30 years, though the Kilohana site is planned to house fire survivors for five years. They are the first prefabricated, modular temporary homes that FEMA has built that meet the International Building Code and local amendments. Home Latest Department News, Newsroom, Office of the Governor Press Releases Office of the Governor.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has approved the state of Hawaii's request to receive financial and direct temporary housing assistance for Lahaina wildfire survivors through Feb. 10. Hawaii's Tiny Homes Offer a New Model of Disaster Recovery After Lahaina burned in August 2023, the state invested in a modular home development, hoping to nurture community and leave behind.
An initial increment of new rent-free temporary homes developed in Lahaina by the Federal Emergency Management Agency for survivors of the 2023 Maui wildfires has opened for use. The first 24 homes in FEMA's 167. A construction worker carries equipment Friday at the 57-acre Ka Laʻi Ola temporary housing project site above Wahikuli in Lahaina.
The first tiny home modular units are nearly ready for. Two years since Maui fires, 900 Hawaii residents move into historic tiny home village: 'Second largest in the nation'.