Building Industry Hawaii - July 2023

ALAN SHINTANI INC. alan-shintani.com NOTEWORTHY CONTENDERS CONTENDERS

W aipahu-based Alan Shintani Inc. tops this year’s Noteworthy Contenders with $36,804,000 in 2022 revenue, up 13.8 percent from $32,335,000 in 2021. The firm also added 12 employees. Shintani may owe its success to its diversified portfolio, comprising proj- ects in virtually all Hawai‘i markets — federal, state, residential and commercial. Fifty-five percent are in the public sector. Sixty-five percent of work is usually subcontracted. Last year, Shintani completed reno- vating Building 2019 at Schofield Barracks; replacing Sewage Pump Station MP-018 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (JBPHH); replacing the chiller and lighting at Building 1514, JBPHH; and two series of Building 479 renovations and repairs at the Defense Logistics Agency, Pearl Harbor.

2022 REVENUE: $36.8M

YEARS IN HAWAI‘I: 49

EMPLOYEES: 68

Waikoloa Family Affordable Rental Housing, an ongoing Alan Shintani Big Island project, is slated to wrap soon. PHOTO COURTESY ALAN SHINTANI INC.

Last year, the firm also won two GCA of Hawaii Safety Awards for zero incident rates in one federal and one overall category, and the 2022 NAHB/Builders Mutual Safety Award for Excellence in a home remodeling category. Shintani was also busy with Waikoloa Family Affordable Rental Housing, an ongoing Big Island proj- ect slated to wrap in June. Other 2023 projects and their scheduled comple- tion dates include a maritime train- ers’ building on Ford Island (May), a district chilled water plant at Marine Corps Base Hawaii (April) and a Department of Homeland Security tenant improvement at the PJKK Federal Building (April). Going forward, high interest rates “will likely go beyond 2023,” says Fred Kim, firm president. “Public sectors like transportation, infrastructure upgrades, education, renewable energy and federal/Department of Defense are expected to be active, while housing and commercial development will be lagging due to high interest rates and delays in obtaining permits.” – Brett Alexander-Estes

78 | BUILDING INDUSTRY HAWAII | JULY 2023

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