Honolulu · Hawaii
Same-day pickup available. 4-hour windows, 7 days a week. COI on file. Recurring contracts and one-time projects across Oahu.
Why Honolulu picks JRP
Oahu's commercial profile blends three distinct engines that produce a different operational rhythm than any mainland market. Waikiki anchors one of the largest hospitality concentrations in the United States — roughly 30,000 hotel rooms across the resort area, plus restaurants, retail, and event venues — operated by Hilton, Marriott, Hyatt, Highgate, Outrigger, and others. The federal and military footprint is one of the densest in the country: Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (the consolidated Navy/Air Force installation), Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kaneohe Bay, Schofield Barracks (US Army), Wheeler Army Airfield, Fort Shafter (US Army Pacific HQ), plus US Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) at Camp H.M. Smith.
For our work, this means heavy hospitality FF&E refresh cycles (continuous shoulder-season activity, plus event-venue and banquet hall turnover), federal contractor office TI and base-adjacent residential turnover (continuous PCS rotations), plus the substantial high-end residential and condo market across Honolulu, Kahala, Kailua, and the leeward Ko Olina corridor. Federal facility access protocols apply for projects within federal jurisdictions; security clearance escort coordination factors into operational planning.
Honolulu is the only Hawaii market where JRP currently operates. Neighbor island coverage (Maui, Kauai, Hawaii Island) is not currently in scope. For multi-island portfolios, the Oahu-only piece routes through us; neighbor-island work needs separate vendor coverage.
Island-wide coverage
Hawaii's island geography produces unique disposal economics. Nearly all goods (trucks, equipment, parts, and the goods that eventually become waste) ship in by container, and waste disposal capacity is finite on each island. Oahu's MSW disposal is anchored by the H-POWER waste-to-energy facility in Kapolei (operated by Covanta on behalf of the City and County of Honolulu) which processes roughly two-thirds of Oahu's MSW into electricity, plus the Waimanalo Gulch Sanitary Landfill (also Kapolei) for ash residue and non-combustibles.
Hawaii Department of Health regulates solid waste under HRS Chapter 342H and HAR Chapter 11-58.1. The HI-5 beverage container deposit program operates statewide. Pricing reflects island disposal economics, which run higher than mainland metros given limited landfill capacity, higher labor costs, and container-shipped logistics inputs. We coordinate routing through H-POWER for combustible streams where economics favor it, with documentation supporting customer ESG and diversion reporting requirements.
Strong realtor referral relationships in established communities including Kahala, Diamond Head, Hawaii Loa Ridge, Manoa, Lanikai, plus the Ko Olina resort residential corridor for high-end residential pre-listing and estate cleanout work.
Where we work
The City and County of Honolulu is geographically coterminous with the island of Oahu. Each region has a distinct commercial profile and routing pattern.
Trophy office, financial services, federal and state government (Hawaii State Capitol, federal courthouses), plus the Chinatown historic and dining district. Common scopes: high-rise office TI, government facility refresh, post-event venue cleanouts. Tight urban access; freight elevator scheduling required for most jobs.
Roughly 30,000 hotel rooms across the Waikiki resort area plus the Ala Moana Center retail anchor (one of the largest open-air shopping centers in the world). Heavy hospitality FF&E refresh, restaurant equipment turnover, retail fixture work, and event-venue cleanouts. After-hours and weekend work is standard.
Consolidated Navy/Air Force installation anchoring substantial federal contractor activity across Aiea, Pearl City, and the leeward corridor. Federal facility access protocols apply. Common scopes: federal contractor office TI, base-adjacent residential turnover, R2-certified IT routing.
Active mixed-use redevelopment corridor between Downtown and Waikiki. New high-rise multifamily, retail, and office (Howard Hughes-led Ward Village master plan). Common scopes: new-construction TI debris, multifamily turnover, retail fixture work.
The "second city" of Oahu, with substantial residential development, retail, light industrial, and the H-POWER waste-to-energy facility plus Waimanalo Gulch Landfill. Common scopes: GC post-build cleanouts, recurring multifamily, light industrial cleanouts, plus disposal-corridor logistics.
Master-planned resort residential corridor anchored by the Four Seasons Ko Olina, Aulani Disney Resort, and the Ko Olina Marina. Plus the surrounding West Oahu residential corridor. Common scopes: high-end resort hospitality FF&E refresh, vacation rental turnover, pre-listing residential.
Windward-side residential anchored by Kailua and Kaneohe, plus Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kaneohe Bay. Tunnel access (Pali Highway, H-3, Likelike) factors into routing. Common scopes: federal contractor work, base-adjacent residential turnover, beach-town pre-listing residential, vacation rental refresh.
Central Oahu (Mililani master-planned community, Wahiawa) plus Schofield Barracks and Wheeler Army Airfield. Substantial military housing turnover. North Shore (Haleiwa, Sunset Beach, Pupukea) anchors surf-tourism and boutique hospitality. Common scopes: military-housing turnover, vacation rental refresh, residential pre-listing.
Where your junk actually goes
Hawaii solid waste is regulated by the Hawaii Department of Health (DOH) under HRS Chapter 342H and HAR Chapter 11-58.1. Oahu's disposal capacity is finite on the island, anchored by the H-POWER waste-to-energy facility plus the Waimanalo Gulch Sanitary Landfill. Hawaii's HI-5 beverage container deposit program operates statewide. Inter-island shipping is not standard scope; Oahu-generated waste stays on Oahu.
Primary MSW disposal facility on Oahu. Processes roughly two-thirds of the island's MSW into electricity. Standard routing for combustible commercial waste streams. Used for higher-volume hospitality and commercial accounts where waste-to-energy economics favor it.
Primary sanitary landfill on Oahu, receiving ash residue from H-POWER plus non-combustible MSW. Finite capacity is a recurring operational consideration; closure-and-replacement planning has been active for years. Used for non-combustible commercial and C&D streams.
Federal facility access protocols apply for projects within Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Schofield Barracks, Wheeler Army Airfield, Fort Shafter, and Camp H.M. Smith. Security clearance escort coordination, federally-controlled IT asset routing through R2-certified federally-cleared processors, and DoD chain-of-custody documentation factor into operational planning.
Primary C&D disposal facility on Oahu. Accepts construction and demolition debris under Hawaii DOH permits. Used for GC and post-build cleanout projects across Oahu. Recycling and source-separation routing supports project diversion documentation where applicable.
Hawaii's HI-5 beverage container deposit program operates statewide. Standard scope for hospitality account beverage container handling where applicable, with redemption coordinated through DOH-certified redemption centers.
Mattress and appliance routing depends on condition. Donation-eligible items route through regional partners (Goodwill Hawaii, Habitat for Humanity ReStore Honolulu, Salvation Army Hawaii) where condition permits. Hospitality FF&E refresh routing supports both donation and disposal channels for hotel mattress replacement programs.
Disposal routing depends on jurisdiction (City and County of Honolulu municipal services apply island-wide) plus federal facility jurisdictions where applicable. Island geography means Oahu-generated waste stays on Oahu; inter-island shipping is not standard scope. Hurricane preparedness is a standing operational consideration June 1 through November 30.
What we handle
Roughly 30,000 hotel rooms across Waikiki plus the Ko Olina resort corridor and North Shore boutique hospitality. Continuous FF&E refresh cycles, restaurant equipment turnover, banquet hall refreshes, and event-venue cleanouts.
JBPHH, Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Schofield Barracks, Fort Shafter, plus US Indo-Pacific Command. Federal contractor TI debris, decommissioning, and federally-controlled IT routing through R2-certified processors.
Multifamily portfolios across Honolulu, the leeward corridor, the windward side, and Central Oahu. Recurring monthly bulk-waste plus on-call tenant move-out cleanouts. Substantial military-housing turnover during PCS rotations.
Ala Moana Center (one of the largest open-air shopping centers in the world), International Market Place, Royal Hawaiian Center, Pearlridge Center, plus the Waikiki retail corridor. Store openings, closures, and refreshes across Oahu retail centers.
Downtown Honolulu Class A office, plus the Kakaako mixed-use corridor. TI debris, decommissioning, FF&E refresh, plus federal facility access coordination for federal contractor offices.
Pre-listing cleanouts and estate cleanouts. Strong realtor referral relationships in Kahala, Diamond Head, Hawaii Loa Ridge, Manoa, Lanikai, plus the Ko Olina resort residential corridor.
Single pickup, recurring contract, multi-property portfolio, or one-time project. Whatever the scope, we'll route to the right rep and respond within one business day. Coverage spans the entire island of Oahu — Honolulu, Waikiki, Pearl Harbor, the leeward and windward sides, Central Oahu, and the North Shore — under one master account.
Honolulu and Oahu accounts