There are two types of transients in Kakaako.
One type is聽the homeless, many of whom聽spend time in neighborhood聽parks during the day and聽move to other areas at night after the parks close. Some consider Kakaako聽home because of its聽relative safety and stability, despite the fact that their presence has聽led to city crackdowns, news headlines and lawsuits.
The other is聽the young professionals聽who聽move to the neighborhood聽for the convenience of having shops, restaurants and work close by. They tend to move away quickly, though.聽Within a couple of years, many leave to start聽or expand their families, among other reasons.
But transient is one way to describe the up-and-coming聽Honolulu neighborhood as it is today. Along its north and east borders of King and Piikoi streets, single-family houses and low-rise apartments are in abundance. But along its south and west borders of Ala Moana Boulevard and Punchbowl Street, high-rise residential buildings and plenty of shops and eateries are starting to shape the neighborhood.
In fact, the area and its population are always growing, so it鈥檚 hard to estimate the number of residents currently living there. Dexter Sensui, a resident of the area for the past eight years and captain of the Sheridan Citizen鈥檚 Patrol, guessed the number may exceed 20,000, with all the residential towers that have gone up in recent years. The聽state聽聽there were nearly聽11,000 people living in Kakaako聽as of 2010.
In the 1970s, the state聽identified Kakaako as a聽neighborhood that could be really valuable if it was redeveloped. The Legislature聽created the 聽to help plan how to use the area.聽Ever since then, the neighborhood has been a target for developers聽and has attracted聽large organizations聽like Kamehameha Schools and companies like The Howard Hughes Corp., which are creating their own communities.
Homeless Find Safety In Kakaako
Homelessness has been a major issue in Kakaako for years. It’s been the subject of countless news stories and continues to be聽an ongoing source of tension. Last year, sweeps by the city at a homeless encampment聽in and聽near聽Kakaako Waterfront Park led to a lawsuit that could cost the city nearly $1 million.
Some of those without permanent housing consider聽Kakaako to be their home.
On a recent Thursday聽afternoon, a woman who only gave her name as Khatt was sitting in the shade outside the Ewa restroom facility at Kakaako Waterfront Park. About five feet away lay her belongings: some blankets, pillows and clothes.
鈥淓verybody says we鈥檙e homeless,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we don鈥檛 consider ourself homeless. We consider ourself houseless. Honestly, home is wherever we make it home. We just don鈥檛 have a house.鈥
Khatt said she has lived in the park on and off between stays at shelters for about two years. She said the clearing of the encampment separated families and made the homeless spread out to other areas.
鈥淓verywhere you go, you鈥檙e going to see a couple of people, a couple of tents, a couple of set ups, a couple of people sleeping on the sidewalk. But before that, these things didn鈥檛 happen,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here was hardly any set ups. Everybody was in here.鈥
During the day, some homeless return to the waterfront park. She said聽it鈥檚 one of the safest parks, where anyone who needs a place to sleep is welcome and residents don鈥檛 judge each other. However, at night, everyone packs up and moves.
Two聽days earlier, Larry Hurst,聽the manager of a Kakaako condo building,聽took Civil Beat along during an evening citizen鈥檚 patrol in Kakaako. Hurst, who聽also serves as a聽vice chairman of the Ala Moana/Kakaako Neighborhood Board,聽pointed toward a stretch of sidewalk where he said the homeless have started to set up.
鈥淚n a couple of hours all that block of King Street will be full on both sides. Didn鈥檛 used to be like that,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 lot of them, from just minding my building, they鈥檙e always just roaming around. I mean every day, every day I鈥檓 keeping someone from making camp.鈥
During an interview at his office, state Rep. Scott Saiki, whose district includes the area, said that聽homelessness in Kakaako “kind of became a crisis” last year when 300聽people聽lived in tents聽in and near the waterfront park.
“It became a public safety issue because there was a lot of crime, drugs, prostitution,” he聽said. “There were even assaults occurring.”
Since the encampment , the state has been unsuccessful in getting the homeless into shelters, Saiki said. He聽speculated that聽mental illness and a聽resistance to following聽a shelter鈥檚 rules prevented the state from achieving its goal.
Coming And Going With The Up And Coming
The homeless aren’t the only ones who are temporary in Kakaako. Saiki said a lot of young couples move out of the area when they start having children. Based on voter registration data, he estimated the turnover is about 30 percent in a two-year period.
Kakaako resident Teri Inoue said there are multiple factors that drive people away from the neighborhood sooner or later.
“I think eventually if you want to own a house, you would have to move outside of town, because affordability is not there. Not just affordability but there isn’t opportunity to get a house, also,” Inoue said.
Her boyfriend, TJ Gonsalves, agreed.
“You got to move to like Ewa, Kapolei 鈥 you get all the affordable house in Hawaii,”聽he said.
The couple were walking hand-in-hand on an afternoon in September around Kamehameha Schools’ SALT along Auahi Street. SALT occupies聽a city block and is filled with places to eat聽and shop.
Inoue and Gonsalves moved into the neighborhood about a year ago, and聽the convenience is what drew them to it. They talked about how the area is centrally located with easy access to Ala Moana Center, the shops at Ward Village, hospitals and restaurants.
As long as they can afford to live in聽area, they don’t plan on leaving any time soon.
On a recent Friday聽afternoon, Sharissa Chun, 48, was walking her 9-month-old dog. She just moved into the neighborhood in April with her husband and daughter. She said Kakaako’s younger, fresh vibe makes it unique.
“Just everything that鈥檚 been going on with Kakaako, there鈥檚 definitely an appreciation,” she said. “It’s the hot spot of Oahu currently. Up and coming.鈥
Like Gonsalves and Inoue, she said she enjoys the area’s proximity to聽the beach, shops and places to eat. She’s a realtor who works from home and sells property on both Oahu and Maui. But with her new location, she has the option to walk to her company’s nearby office.
Although she’s new to the neighborhood, she doesn’t agree that young professionals tend to move away after a short stay. She estimated that 90 percent of the people in her聽building own the units they live in, with many being in their mid-30s to 60s.
A Neighborhood ‘Where There Were No Rules’
Jim Hayes, 66, owner of Tropical Blends, a surf shop on Pohukaina Street, says when he was a kid, Kakaako was the place to go to get into trouble. He grew up near Punchbowl, but Kakaako was his backyard.
“This was always the wild, wild west,” he said.
“This was always where there were no rules. It was just do whatever you wanted kind of thing. And it seemed like all of the funky, little businesses down here. But this area, Kakaako, has聽always been, you know, ‘Let’s go spray graffiti. Let’s go ride our bikes through all the mud puddles,'” Hayes said.
Back then, it was an industrial area with surf shops and plate lunch establishments.
Before Kakaako was zoned for industrial, residential and commercial uses, the area was filled with fishing villages, fishponds and salt ponds. In fact, Ala Moana Boulevard used to be where the shoreline was, said Aron Dote, a spokesperson聽for Kamehameha Schools.
, which owns of the land in the district, is developing nine blocks along the Ewa end of the district to create聽a community called Our Kakaako. The is to build an open, walkable neighborhood that can be used for residences, shops and restaurants.
鈥淜akaako has a long, extended history, and it extends from pre-contact times to our industrial times to our urban times, and what a lot of people don鈥檛 really know is that the land itself is a very unique and it鈥檚 always been a central place for people to gather,鈥 Dote said.
The Howard Hughes Corp. is also building its own neighborhood called , where residents can , on about 60 acres.
State Sen. Brickwood Galuteria, who represents聽Kakaako, said the area provides the opportunity to envision the urban lifestyle and build it.
鈥淔or Kakaako, the excitement is that it is the most vibrant growth we鈥檒l see in our lifetime,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o as opposed to Waikiki, urban Kakaako will serve it鈥檚 purpose as more of a residential-type of community.鈥
However, as Kakaako continues to be developed, Galuteria said he hopes it will result in a balanced community.
鈥淪o you have young couples that want to come to work, you have families, you have kids running around, you have kupuna, walking around, and then of course, you鈥檙e going to have need for some visitor investments too, obviously,鈥 he said.
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