WILLEMSTAD – FKP believes its new Mi Kas Awor housing model could eventually help Curaçao produce between 800 and 900 homes annually if broader political and financial support is secured.
According to the organization, the current pilot phase focuses on at least 72 homes per year within existing operational and financial capacity.
However, FKP says the real strength of the program lies in its scalability within Curaçao’s national public housing policy.
The housing foundation argues that with stronger political backing, structural financing mechanisms and broader national implementation, the model could significantly increase annual housing production and help structurally reduce the island’s housing shortage for the first time.
The pilot phase currently serves as a controlled implementation stage in which financial structures, operational procedures and execution methods will be further tested and validated.