The flat, low-slung neighborhood of Kakaako near downtown Honolulu - TopicsExpress



          

The flat, low-slung neighborhood of Kakaako near downtown Honolulu was once an alluvial plain dotted with fish ponds that deteriorated into a gritty area with auto repair shops and warehouses. During an era of urban revitalization in the 1970s, the state formed the Hawaii Community Development Authority to oversee neighborhood redevelopment in Kakaako, which lies between downtown Honolulu and Waikiki. Since then, Kakaako has evolved into a retail and entertainment district, with shopping centers and Honolulu’s largest multiplex cinema, as well as a neighborhood popular with residential real estate investors. Kakaako’s largest landowner, the Howard Hughes Corporation, based in Texas, is poised to begin building three 400-foot residential condominium towers, the first phase of a development on 60 acres once owned by the family of Victoria Ward, a descendant of Hawaiian royalty. Although an approved master plan for the development, called Ward Village, includes as many as 22 towers and more than a million square feet of retail and commercial space, to be built probably in the next 10 to 15 years, many of the projects in that plan would have to undergo later levels of review. The Hughes corporation, which inherited the acreage and master plan when it emerged out of the bankrupt General Growth Properties in 2009, has already been modifying some of the plans to take into account community concerns. While the proposed overall building density did not change, the developers narrowed the towers to preserve more of the ocean views enjoyed by inland residents. In recent years, some residents have complained that Kakaako’s 400-foot height limit for buildings is too high. While Howard Hughes continues to propose towers that are maximum height, developers are shifting the orientation of many to make them “mauka-makai” (Hawaiian for “toward the mountains-toward the sea”) to preserve some vistas for islanders living outside the new buildings. Developers have agreed to survey the properties for native burial grounds, with guidance from the Oahu Island Burial Council. While Duane Komine, the second vice chairman of the Ala Moana/Kakaako Neighborhood Board No. 11, said the developers had solicited input and provided regular updates to affected residents, some islanders have lingering concerns. Larry Hurst, a resident of the area for more than 20 years, said some continued to complain that ocean views will be blocked, even though the development has already been approved. “Unfavorable public interest has always been minimal and doesn’t seem to be roused until a development is planned for next door,” Mr. Hurst said. “That’s when people come out from behind their curtains.” Mr. Hurst, who is chairman of the Ala Moana/Kakaako neighborhood board but was not speaking for the board, said he was concerned that the master plan did not include housing for poor people, but for people making an average income or above. Twenty percent of the 4,000 units proposed by Howard Hughes must be “work force housing,” or affordable to people earning 100 to 140 percent of the area’s median income for a family of four, which is $86,300 in 2013. While low-income residents might use public transportation, he said that he doubted the owners of luxury condos would, worsening issues with traffic congestion. “They’re not going to be straphangers,” he said. “They want to have their own cars. It’s like that now — people only have to go a couple of blocks, but they take their S.U.V.’s.” Mr. Hurst said there had also been concerns in the community that a board of political appointees had made the decisions on a massive development that will transform the neighborhood. “There exists a general feeling of mistrust that special deals are being made with land developers to benefit a select few as permits are influenced by an appointed commission, not by duly elected representatives,” he said.
Posted on: Tue, 03 Dec 2013 02:36:09 +0000

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