All eyes Ewa – Hawaii Editorials – Starbulletin.com

All eyes Ewa

 

Ho’opili’s developer extols the master-planned project’s virtues

By Mike Jones

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Aug 16, 2009

There’s unfortunately been some misinformation about Ho’opili — O’ahu’s first fully-integrated, transit-oriented, job-generating, "traditional" community that puts homes near jobs, schools, shopping and parks. Let me take this opportunity to set the record straight and to share some information I believe Oahu’s residents will be happy to hear.

It’s about more than just homes.

Ho’opili — which means "coming together" in Hawaiian — does propose building 11,750 new homes (which is a lower density than called for in the Ewa Development Plan) to be built over the next 20 to 25 years. While other Oahu developments are planned, Ho’opili will be the only community that will provide a significant number of affordable and competitively-priced homes in the area.

But Ho’opili is more than a bedroom community.

The real innovation of Ho’opili is that it will create thousands of new jobs in the area, which allows people to live where they work, thus helping to keep cars off the road.

Visionary, long-term planning pays off.

Back in the 1970s, Campbell Estate and the city created a vision for a second urban core on O’ahu — the new "Second City" — to help ease the pressure on growth in Honolulu. This was one of the most visionary land-use decisions in Hawaii’s history.

Other major efforts now underway to complete the Second City include the build-out of downtown Kapolei, the UH-West Oahu campus, the Salvation Army’s Kroc Center and Department of Hawaiian Home Lands’ retail center and residential development. Ho’opili helps complete that vision, providing homes and jobs to make the dream of a Second City a reality.

Perhaps the most critical part of the Ewa Development Plan is not only did the city indicate where growth should occur, it wisely planned for where growth should not happen. The Ewa Development Plan, and Ho’opili’s fit within it, is an open space "protection plan," limiting growth to certain areas.

Farming will continue at Ho’opili for years.

Currently, the site is being used on an interim basis for diversified agriculture. Accordingly, tenants were provided meaningful and substantial concessions at the outset given the temporary nature of their use.

The tenants’ transition from the Ho’opili lands does not need to occur overnight, but should be ratable to accommodate the 20-year-plus build-out. When the time does come many years from now, we will work closely with the farmers in their relocation efforts to provide a smooth transition.

Specter of development looms over farm land – Hawaii Editorials – Starbulletin.com

 

Specter of development looms over farm land

By Cynthia Oi

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Aug 16, 2009

The Aloun Farms stall is the second shoppers encounter upon arriving at the farmers market at Kapiolani Community College.

The first spot is reserved for the coffee kiosk, the market operator’s nod to caffeine fixes people might need before plunging into a swarm of food gatherers literally bumping elbows with tour-bused visitors so early in the day.

Aloun’s is one of about a dozen stands that sells an assortment of fruits and vegetables that vary with the season.

Summer delivers an abundance of melons, most of them common, but from time to time, an exotic yield from a test crop will appear, samples set out for keen market watchers to taste.

In winter, purple, red, yellow and orange potatoes arrive, some of them also pilot runs to determine what types will grow best in the rich soil of the Ewa Plain.

Judging from the wealth of foods at that small booth — cabbages, bananas, beans, green and sweet round onions, broccoli, corn, pumpkins and squash — just about anything will flourish there.