KPDA pushes private sector role in affordable housing drive
Qs. Cassius Kusienya, Director of Estates Management at the State Department for Housing and Urban Development, delivering keynote remarks on behalf of PS Charles Hinga. PHOTO | COURTESY
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The Kenya
Property Developers Association (KPDA) has rallied government officials,
financiers and private developers to accelerate delivery of affordable housing,
as the State moves to meet its ambitious construction targets under the
national housing programme.
At the
association’s annual Developers Engagement Forum on Friday, Housing Secretary
Qs. Cassius Kusienya, speaking on behalf of Principal Secretary Charles Hinga,
said 262,913 affordable housing units are currently under development across
the country, with 8,367 units already completed.
Kusienya
told stakeholders that achieving the annual target of 200,000 housing units
will require stronger collaboration with the private sector.
He described KPDA as a key
implementation partner and noted that through incentives such as the VAT
Exemption Programme, government has supported private developers to construct
13,622 affordable housing units.
“Parliament
enacted the Affordable Housing Act 2024 to give effect to the constitutional
right to accessible and adequate housing,” Kusienya said.
“The programme is moving from
frameworks to physical assets, converting the entire country into one massive
construction site.”
The Affordable Housing Board outlined emerging
operational structures, including a standardized developer engagement
framework.
Board member John Kimani said a
KPDA-Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KNCCI) consortium will
join the programme as an institutional partner, allowing private developers to
build units that the Board will off-take for allocation to eligible homebuyers.
The
arrangement is anchored in Section 44 of the Affordable Housing Act, which
provides for agreements between the Board and private institutions.
Developers
shared experiences from completed and ongoing projects. Harveer Singh of
Landmark Holdings presented on the delivery of over 1,000 units in Konza using
aluminium formwork technology to accelerate construction timelines.
Mumo Kianga of Mi Vida Homes and
Kioi Wambaa of IHS Kenya highlighted their partnership in delivering 200
green-certified units at Garden City, with 4,000 additional units planned.
Unity Homes’ Jason Horsey also
outlined lessons from multiple projects already delivered under the programme.
Technical
partners addressed implementation challenges, including taxation and
construction efficiency.
Seeta Shah of FSD Kenya presented
findings from the VAT Incentive Programme, while Marjorie Kivuva of Tarra
Agility guided developers on accessing a 15 per cent corporate tax rebate
available to those building at least 100 residential units annually.
Sam Muihia and Parin Shah of
Kumkang Kind demonstrated how aluminium formwork systems can reduce
construction cycles to between four and seven days per floor.
Stakeholders
were told the Affordable Housing Programme has created more than 525,000 jobs
since 2022, with notable participation from youth, women and persons with
disabilities.
More than Ksh.11 billion has been
ring-fenced for micro, small and medium enterprises and Jua Kali artisans
supplying materials for completed projects.
KPDA
Chairman Ken Luusa described the association as a bridge between government and
private developers.
“The
private sector is ready. Government has laid out its priorities. The question
is whether we can build the bridge between them that allows both sides to meet
their objectives,” he said.
A
fireside chat moderated by Architectural Association of Kenya President Arch.
George Arabu brought together representatives from the Affordable Housing
Board, FSD Kenya, Tarra Agility and Kumkang Kind to discuss replication
strategies and structuring bankable housing projects.
The forum concluded with structured
networking sessions linking developers with financiers, government agencies and
technical partners, as stakeholders signalled renewed momentum toward scaling
affordable housing delivery nationwide.


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