Kaimana Beach, also known as Sans Souci Beach, is a small haven for locals along the Waikiki shoreline, an international tourist destination that attracts several million tourists annually.

Maybe that鈥檚 because visitors strolling along the beachwalk toward Diamond Head run up against a foreboding concrete structure filled with rebar and decorated with 鈥淒anger Keep Out鈥 signs.

It鈥檚 the Waikiki War Memorial Natatorium. And it鈥檚 enough to make a tourist turn back before they reach Kaimana on the other side.

As the debate over what to do with the decaying structure flares back up, so has the question of what will happen to Kaimana Beach if the cavernous saltwater swimming pool with arena seating, that has remained closed and padlocked for more than three decades, is torn down.

鈥淧eople say poor Kaimana Beach will vanish if you take it down,鈥 said Jim Bickerton, an attorney for the Kaimana Beach Coalition, which is pushing for the creation of a public beach. 鈥淣obody is proposing taking it down and letting nature take its course.鈥

Beach Would Quickly Erode

Indeed, without the Natatorium, there would be no beach.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there is any delusion about it,鈥 said Jim Anderson, treasurer of the Friends of the Natatorium, which favors restoring the Natatorium. 鈥淚f you could join the Star Wars coalition and press a button and make the Natatorium disappear, Kaimana Beach would disappear. There is no question about it.鈥

The structure that jets out into the ocean is what created the small crescent beach, causing sand to accumulate on its east side. That beach will quickly erode if the Natatorium is demolished, according to studies.

But this doesn鈥檛 mean that there isn鈥檛 a plan to keep the beach, and create a new one where the Natatorium currently sits.

If Kaimana Beach is to continue to exist, a groin that jets out perpendicular to the shoreline and supports the Natatorium would have to remain, and another groin to the west would have to be constructed to make a new beach where the pool used to rest, according to studies conducted by Waimanalo-based Sea Engineering.

The cost of the plan, including constructing a new groin and trucking in sand, would be about $5.2 million, or $110 per square foot of new beach, according to the report. Ongoing maintenance costs would range from $25,000 to $50,000 a year.


While not the most natural of beaches, the string of beaches along Waikiki is largely engineered. Draining of wetlands, shoreline development and seawalls have largely destroyed the wide beach that used to exist, according to a by the University of Hawaii鈥檚 School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology. The beaches, which continue to erode and narrow, have had to be continually replenished by imported sand.

While even opponents of the plan to remove the memorial say that the groins can maintain a beach, the decades-old debate about what do do with the Natatorium isn’t set to die down anytime soon.

Gov. Neil Abercrombie indicated last month that he would take back control of the Natatorium, a state property that’s operated by the city. He’s considering filling in the swimming pool and building a volleyball court.

The city, based on recommendations of a 17-member community task force in 2009, had been moving to tear down the Natatorium.

The governor鈥檚 plan outraged supporters of removing the structure, such as the Kaimana Beach Coalition, and set the stage for a new chapter in the ongoing saga over what do with the memorial to World War I veterans.

Abercrombie is likely to make a decision on whether to issue an executive order that gives the state control of the memorial before next year’s legislative session starts in January. If he does, it would be the fifth time in 80 years that a governor has revoked the city’s management of the Natatorium, according to information from the Historic Hawaii Foundation.

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