Dollhouse in Piilani Village
Doll house located in popular Piilani Village 3. A perfect distance to walk to Safeway, Starbucks and all the restaurants but not hear the noise and chaos of business and also very far away from the highway!
This single level home has a spacious great room with large kitchen island, a dining room area, large master suite, two other bedrooms in separate wing and an adorable garden.
Tenants would love to stay on and rent while taking great care of this fabulous home. This is a perfect opportunity for an investor or someone wishing to purchase a home now at today’s great prices, rent it out to the perfect tenant until the time to move over permanently comes along.
Call Bob Hansen, BROKER @ 808.283.9456 or Donna D. Hansen, Realtor (S) @ 808.280.1650 to schedule a showing appointment.
University of Hawaii Has Record High Enrollment ~ UHMC Up 5.2%
UH enrollment sets record at 56,716
By Star-Advertiser Staff
Article from: Star-Advertiser
Spring enrollment in the University of Hawaii system has increased for the fourth consecutive year, pushing the total number of students to a record 56,716.
Initial figures this semester show an increase of 955 students, or 1.7 percent more than spring 2010.
While enrollment at the flagship Manoa campus decreased slightly with a loss of 44 students or 0.2 percent for a total of 19,242 students, enrollment at seven of the remaining nine campuses increased: UH-West Oahu, 9.8 percent; Hawaii Community College, 9.3 percent; Windward, 6.9 percent; UH Maui College, 5.2 percent; Leeward, 2.6 percent; UH-Hilo, 2.5 percent; and Kapiolani, 1.1 percent. Enrollment decreases were recorded at two community colleges: Hono•lulu, 3.6 percent; and Kauai, 1.2 percent.
Hawaii Had Over 7 Million Visitors in 2010 and Spending Rose 16.2%
Hawaii attracted 7 million visitors, $11.4 billion in spending in 2010
By Allison Schaefers
Article from: Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Jan 26, 2011
Visitor arrivals to Hawaii grew by 8.7 percent to nearly 7.1 million in 2010 and spending rose 16.2 percent to $11.4 billion.
Arrivals in December grew for the fourteenth straight month and overall spending rose by double-digit increases for the eighth straight month, according to data released today by the Hawaii Tourism Authority.
Total arrivals rose 9.6 percent to 633,730 visitors in December and total spending by these visitors increased 17.9 percent to $1.1 billion. Arrivals in all major markets posted December gains. Visitors from the U.S. West rose by 8.4 percent, visitors from the U.S. East grew by 10.1 percent, visitors from Canada grew by 16.6 percent, visitors from Japan increased by 8.6 percent and cruise ship traffic was up 11.5 percent.
While the results are solid indicators that Hawaii tourism is continuing to gain momentum, the state still has a way to go to achieve full recovery, said Mike McCartney, HTA’s president and chief executive officer.







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