KINGSTON, Jamaica — In a bold policy announcement delivered at the Urban Development Corporation (UDC) Board Retreat on April 30, Prime Minister Dr. Andrew Holness has laid out a new national development vision centered on bringing improved public amenities and accessible housing to communities across every corner of Jamaica. At the heart of this vision is a non-negotiable mandate: the UDC, in formal partnership with the National Housing Trust (NHT), will develop a public park in each of Jamaica’s 14 parishes.
Holness made clear that meaningful national progress cannot be measured only in economic indicators, but must show up in tangible, daily improvements for ordinary Jamaicans. Accessible, thoughtfully designed recreational spaces, he argued, are a core public good that directly lift community well-being. The island-wide park initiative is designed to extend the benefits of high-quality public spaces to all citizens, regardless of their location, giving every community a safe, welcoming, professionally managed space for leisure, social connection, and physical wellness.
Drawing on existing successful projects as a blueprint, the prime minister pointed to Harmony Beach Park as a model of what well-executed public space development can achieve. He detailed how projects of this kind do more than provide green space: they reshape entire neighborhoods, boost local pride, and create long-term improvements to quality of life that ripple out across surrounding communities.
To move the initiative forward quickly, Holness has instructed the UDC to immediately conduct a national survey of state-owned lands, identifying parcels suitable for park development and present a full report to his office outlining potential sites for each parish. He stressed that this process requires disciplined, efficient use of public assets, ensuring that underutilized state lands are put to work serving the public good. The prime minister also emphasized that timely delivery and rigorous project management will be non-negotiable priorities for the program, pushing the UDC to avoid delays and deliver results for Jamaican communities.
Beyond the park initiative, Holness called on the UDC to leverage its extensive national land bank to advance another critical national priority: closing Jamaica’s persistent housing gap. With unmet demand for affordable quality housing remaining a major challenge across the island, the prime minister said the UDC has a central role to play in unlocking its land reserves for residential development. He called for coordinated action across all relevant government agencies to mobilize resources and address the housing shortage, framing the work as a core responsibility of state development entities.
