SAVANNA-LA-MAR, JAMAICA — Prime Minister Andrew Holness has declared a comprehensive restructuring of Jamaica’s New Social Housing Programme (NSHP) to address the nation’s shifting residential demands more effectively. The announcement came during a ceremonial home handover to beneficiary Beverly Barnaby Moo-Young in Westmoreland on Friday.
Holness emphasized that the program’s immediate focus will shift toward deploying semi-permanent rapid response shelters to accelerate housing delivery. While affirming the government’s commitment to completing all currently approved projects, he revealed plans to fundamentally ‘recraft’ the initiative’s operational framework moving forward.
While acknowledging the NSHP’s institutional achievements in beneficiary assessment and construction management, the Prime Minister identified technological transformation as critical for improvement. The program has historically relied on conventional building methods utilizing blocks and steel, with limited experimentation poured concrete systems.
“We must transition toward prefabricated and pre-construction solutions,” Holness asserted, specifically highlighting precast and containerized modular housing as promising alternatives. He simultaneously addressed potential challenges associated with these methods, including ventilation adequacy, unit sizing appropriateness, and aesthetic integration into Jamaica’s landscape.
“Technology integration must be adapted to our unique circumstances to ensure housing solutions truly fit our people and environment,” Holness explained, noting that widespread modular construction requires careful consideration of visual impact and livability.
The Prime Minister concurrently validated the NSHP’s structural resilience, revealing that nearly all program homes successfully withstood Hurricane Melissa’s recent impact, with only two units experiencing flooding while maintaining structural integrity.
