Camp Hansen opens new barracks complex for Marines

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1–2 minutes

Summary

A new Camp Hansen barracks complex will house 1,096 enlisted Marines as part of a U.S.-Japan base modernization effort on Okinawa.

Why this matters

The project is part of a long-running U.S.-Japan effort to modernize and consolidate military facilities on Okinawa. It also expands private living space for enlisted Marines stationed far from home.

Nearly 1,100 enlisted Marines will soon move into a new barracks complex as part of a broader effort to upgrade military housing on Okinawa.

Marine Corps Installations Pacific commander Maj. Gen. Brian Wolford joined U.S. military and Japanese officials Friday to open Camp Hansen’s new bachelor enlisted quarters complex during a ceremony attended by about 80 guests.

The complex, behind the theater on the south side of the base, includes three barracks that can house 1,096 unaccompanied enlisted Marines through the rank of sergeant, camp director Joseph Scala told reporters during a tour. A detached parking garage has 220 spaces, project manager Michael Scott said.

The project replaces six older barracks under the Defense Policy Review Initiative, a long-running U.S.-Japan effort to consolidate and modernize military facilities on Okinawa.

Planning began in 2019, and construction started in March 2022, construction manager Eric Godoy said after the ceremony. Japan paid for the $320 million project, which involved 15 local construction companies.

Each of the three barracks has 184 housing modules designed for two Marines. Each resident has a private, 155-square-foot bedroom and a sink. Roommates share a kitchen, restroom, shower, washer, and dryer within the 710-square-foot unit.

Base officials said 11 more buildings of the same type will eventually be built at Camp Hansen to replace barracks there and at Camp Kinser.

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