Colorful murals that cover聽warehouses in Kakaako might attract local artists to the rapidly growing area, but the rents don鈥檛.

Artists are helping popularize Kakaako, but as auto body shops turn into high-rise condominiums, the creative types are getting pushed out.

鈥淚 could never afford to live there,鈥 said printmaker and painter Adam Funari.

He designs apparel for , a lifestyle brand he co-owns. To get by, he works as a creative director at a home health care company.

But there might be hope for Funari and others like him. 聽is a planned $52 million affordable housing complex with all 84 units reserved for artists.

Using public funds, project developer 聽has been building the complexes for artists in cities across the country.

Kakaako Development at 1025 Waimanu St. for ArtSpace development. 15 feb 2017
ArtSpace’s 65-year lease on the .7-acre parcel at 1025 Waimanu St. will allow it to turn a parking lot into a housing complex for artists. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

聽in January at 1025 Waimanu St., where a parking lot will be turned into an apartment complex with the聽 on the ground floor.

Most of the units, 59 of 84, will be reserved for people making up to 50 percent of area median income. According to the聽,聽that would be $35,200 per year for an individual or $50,250 per year for a family of four in Honolulu.

Nine units will be reserved for people earning up to 30 percent of area median income, and the rest will be for people earning up to 60 percent.

If these numbers seem unusually low for affordable housing developments in Kakaako, it鈥檚 because they are.

An artist’s rendering of the ArtSpace development planned in Kakaako. Courtesy of ArtSpace

Since 2013, the聽 has granted permits for eight residential buildings in Kakaako, for a total of聽1,754 new residential units. The HCDA is the state agency tasked with planning development in聽Kakaako.

Ola Ka Ilima鈥檚 84 units are the only ones that are considered affordable to low-income Hawaii residents.聽HUD defines “low income” as people earning 80 percent or less of area median income, which equates to $56,350 for an individual and $80,450 for a family of four in Honolulu.

ArtSpace is leasing the land from HCDA, and is required to maintain聽affordable rents for the duration of the lease, the developer said.

鈥淭he community has been pretty much in support of it,鈥 Kakaako/Ala Moana Neighborhood Board Chair Ryan Tam said of the development. 鈥淜akaakko does need more of this diversified housing, and this definitely fits the bill.鈥

Housing artists in an increasingly affluent area will help the area maintain its character and allow the artists to develop their craft, said Rich Richardson, executive director of the聽 a gallery and performance space in Chinatown.

Thirteen years ago, Richardson consulted with ArtSpace to create the , 19 market-rate lofts in Chinatown rented to artists that Richardson selects.

鈥淚t鈥檒l add a second node or ground zero for arts production,鈥 Richardson said of Ola Ka Ilima.

He sees Chinatown-Kakaako area as a 鈥渃reative beltway鈥 for聽Honolulu.

鈥楲ow Income People Who Happen To Be Artists鈥

In her years as an artist and musician in Hawaii, Jhune Liwanag has seen local artists leave the islands in search of livelier arts communities and cheaper rents.

鈥淢any people will either move in order to be in a place where there is more going on, or they quit altogether,鈥 she said.

Liwanag runs , a production company that records tapes and CDs for local bands. With a degree in elementary and special education, she also works as a skills trainer for students with disabilities and in retail at .

Even with three聽jobs, Liwanag had to choose between paying rent or producing聽music. She chose music, so last month Liwanag left a Honolulu apartment to move back in with her parents in Waipahu.

Jhune Liwanag plays guitar and Adam Funari plays聽drums for the band Aura Bora. Natanya Freidheim/Civil Beat

She may be a good candidate to live in Ola Ka Ilima because her situation is typical of artists living聽in ArtSpace鈥檚 33 artist housing projects across the聽country

鈥淢ost of the people that will move into this project have one or two day jobs in addition to their artwork,鈥 said Greg Handberg senior vice president of properties for ArtSpace. 鈥淭his is affordable housing that鈥檚 being created in a way that will meet the needs of low-income people who happen to be artists.鈥

Handberg said a one-bedroom apartment in Ola Ka Ilima will cost $565 for an individual earning 30 percent of area median income. Fair market rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Honolulu, , is $1,492.

On the higher end, a three-bedroom apartment for someone at 60 percent of area median income would cost $1,568 at Ola Ka Ilima, while at market rate a three-bedroom apartment would cost $2,885聽per month in Honolulu.

To qualify for an apartment at Ola Ka Ilima, Liwanag would聽need to show she qualifies both financially and in her commitment to art.

Six months before an ArtSpace development is complete, an 鈥溾 begins sifting through the applications and interviewing applicants. ArtSpace assembles the committee in the early stages of the project’s development, gathering聽15 to 20 people from the local arts community who are not interested in living in the units themselves.

During聽her interview, Liwanag might bring examples of聽听辞谤 , or聽she might perform music for the committee.

Committee members won鈥檛 judge the quality of the work. Instead, they will look for the artists’ commitment to their craft聽and a high level of engagement in the local arts community.

Handberg expects a lot of interest in the units, considering the state鈥檚 dire need for affordable housing.

The company’s policy to accept only artists as tenants has been . Some people ask why public affordable housing funds should be allocated to a project if the units built are unavailable to the vast majority of low-income people.

In 2007, an IRS audit found that using tax credits to build affordable housing for artists violated the general public use requirement under the聽.

A year later, Congress amended聽the聽law, adding artists as a category of people who can receive preference for affordable housing. People with “special needs” constitute another category.

The amendment聽passed in part thanks to by ArtSpace.

For its Kakaako project, the company鈥檚 funding sources include state and federal low-income housing tax credits, the city鈥檚 聽and聽HOME Investment Partnership Program funds, the state鈥檚 聽and state grants in aid.

Victor Geminiani, co-executive director of Hawaii鈥檚 Appleseed Center for Law and Economic Justice, sees the project as a public benefit.

鈥淎rt is essential to the foundation of who are as a people,鈥 Geminiani said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for us to provide opportunity for (artists鈥 work) to flourish.鈥

Reshaping The Neighborhood

ArtSpace housing聽聽in New Orleans, where jazz musicians who drew tourists back to the city聽following Hurricane Katrina were eventually priced out the neighborhoods they helped to enrich.

Similarly, the growing popularity of Kakaako and Chinatown make it difficult for artists to survive in the area.

People struggle to be creative or create art because they don’t聽have time,” said Jasper Wong, founder of the Kakaako mural festival . “There are so many responsibilities and聽so much cost that goes into staying afloat in Hawaii. Places where (art)聽thrives, there’s more support for it.”

Space for public art projects shrinks as Kakaako develops, he added, noting available wall space for the POW! WOW! Hawaii murals is disappearing. The annual聽mural festival brings聽street artists from around the world to Kakaako for a week of painting and performances.

Richardson of the Arts at Marks Garage is in charge of selecting applicants to live in the Chinatown Artists Lofts. He says housing artists in the area has helped Honolulu鈥檚 former red-light district transform into a community聽where artists and entrepreneurs work and play.

Street festivals, including and , have made Chinatown an entertainment hub for young adults.

1116 Smith Street Artist loft Owner Landlord Ernie Hunt at entrance gate. 17 feb 2017
Ernie Martin has operated the Chinatown Artists Lofts at 1116 Smith St. for 13 years. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The lofts attracted聽residents with unique interests who聽are working to reshape the neighborhood.

鈥淣ow when the creative types speak up about how they want public policy to affect the downtown area, they鈥檙e listened to,鈥 Richardson said.

Ola Ka Ilima, he said, will do the same for Kakaako.

The benefit of having artists in an area has helped ward off the 鈥溾 attitude many developers of low-income housing face in affluent neighborhoods.

鈥淗aving it in Kakaako specifically is a strategy,鈥 said Dana Paresa, a local artist who for opportunities in Portland. 鈥淚t’s a growing, burgeoning, hip neighborhood. It looks really attractive and beneficial to the developers.鈥

Jason Cutinella, who has lived in the Chinatown lofts for six years, said residing around artists has contributed to his success running , a magazine publishing company based in Chinatown.

Cutinella works on the business side of the publication, but says living next to artists and interacting with them on a daily basis helps him think outside of the box.

The creative atmosphere combined with lower rents helps ArtSpace tenants spend more time on their art instead of side jobs, Handberg said.

“Things like ArtSpace, if it does what it says it’s going to do, then hopefully it will help further the arts community here and provide resources,” Wong said.

Support Independent, Unbiased News

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.

 

About the Author