honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser

Posted on: Monday, December 22, 2003

Time to 'pick up pace' of Kaka'ako growth, Lingle says

By Bruce Dunford
Associated Press

After nearly two decades of preparation, Gov. Linda Lingle believes it's time to start "picking up the pace" in the redevelopment of Honolulu's Kaka'ako waterfront.

"I will tell you that 17 years is a little bit too much continuity for me," Lingle said, referring to a succession of officials overseeing the project that began in 1987 to transform an unattractive light-industrial tract on state lands into more suitable urban uses.

"I'd like to see a picking up of the pace right now," she said following a ceremony dedicating $24 million in completed street-widening and infrastructure projects there on Thursday.

Lingle participated in the ceremonies sponsored by the Hawai'i Community Development Authority, the state agency created in 1976 to supersede city zoning and development authority over the 670-acre Kaka'ako area adjacent to downtown Honolulu.

Most noticeable in the project is the transforming of Ilalo Street into a wide, landscaped boulevard extending from Ala Moana at Ward Avenue and back to Ala Moana at South Street on a realigned and widened Forrest Avenue.

Much of the cost, however, went into the installation of upgraded underground sewage, drainage, water service and other infrastructure to handle major public and private developments expected for the area.

The anchors for a beautified high-tech campus setting are the University of Hawai'i's John A. Burns School of Medicine, now under construction, and related cancer research center. State officials hope these will attract private medical research and development companies as tenants.

The state has three five-acre lots that are expected to be leased out to commercial developers, earning the state revenue to help cover development costs.

HCDA officials, meanwhile, are continuing discussions with Kajima Urban Development, a subsidiary of Kajima USA, about building an aquarium and marine research complex in Kaka'ako.

Lingle said after 17 years of preparation, the public will now be able to start seeing the results of the improvements.

"Certainly the medical school is going to provide a real good example of what can come about when these kind of investments are made here in Kaka'ako," Lingle said.

The governor said another key element in making the development successful will be creating private residential property in Kaka'ako and surrounding areas.

"For this part of Honolulu to be vibrant, in my opinion, there has to be a strong residential component tied with it. There has to be people here. It has to be alive. It has to have energy beyond when stores close at 5 or 6 o'clock," Lingle said. "To really have the vibrancy of an active city bustling waterfront, you have to have people."

The governor also said she'll renew an effort to get the Legislature to approve consolidating the Hawai'i Community Development Authority with the state's Aloha Tower Development Corporation, which oversees the adjacent Honolulu Harbor property.

Despite her home-rule views as a former Maui County mayor, Lingle said she believes the Kaka'ako development should remain under state jurisdiction because the state has had success and has a greater ability to borrow money.