In November, engineering students at Farrington High School partnered with local officials to paint colorful curb extensions near their Kalihi campus, making those areas more walkable with what鈥檚 known as a quick-build project.
Those bright, make it easier to cross busy streets in a neighborhood that鈥檚 .
The project was relatively cheap — about $50,000 in dollars compared to the millions spent on heavier road projects that typically lead to more cars. If the designs fall out of favor, they can be swiftly removed. They鈥檙e a modest, isolated safety upgrade on an island with the ideal climate for more walking and biking.
Four months after the Kalihi curbs were redone, the COVID-19 pandemic hit Hawaii.
There’s been a surge of residents walking and biking to get out of the house ever since, with many locals seeming to suddenly discover the joys of exercise.
But this pandemic-era trend is happening on an island where the streets cater far more to cars than to foot and bicycle traffic. People outside, meanwhile, need more space to stay physically distant as they pass by.
Maybe it鈥檚 time to usher in Honolulu’s era of the quick build.
‘Profound Changes’
Simple and easy fixes — akin to the Kalihi safety project — could accommodate the island鈥檚 new walking and biking trend and help keep it going at a time when .
鈥淲e have a lot of public space in roads and right now the cars aren鈥檛 there, generally speaking — but pedestrians are,鈥 said , transportation director for the Ulupono Initiative. 鈥淚t seems perfectly reasonable during this time to say, well, should we be providing more of that space for that purpose?鈥
The state鈥檚 Department of Health has at least six quick build projects in the works across Hawaii, including two on Oahu. Each of those projects should cost less than $50,000, said CJ Johnson, physical activity program coordinator at the agency. The locations have yet to be determined, but the agency hopes to work with the counties to build in vulnerable areas, he said.
The pandemic has spurred 鈥減rofound changes to Hawaii鈥檚 travel and activity patterns, highlighting just how much public space and resources are dedicated to the speed and convenience of automobiles at the expense of healthy, safe and active transportation,鈥 Johnson said in an email Friday.
鈥淨uick build is a proven strategy for transforming streets to prioritize bicycling, walking and personal mobility aids” — wheelchairs and motorized scooters.
The city鈥檚 transportation department says it doesn鈥檛 have any official counts on how much pedestrian and bicycle traffic has grown since the pandemic hit.
Nonetheless, the demand for more use of the public road space for those modes appears to be growing. On the first of four 鈥淥pen Street Sundays鈥 that took place on Kalakaua Avenue in June, the city counted 628 pedestrians and 691 cyclists — or people riding some other wheels — in a 30-minute period.
The four, limited Sunday events largely mimic the 鈥渟low streets鈥 or 鈥渙pen streets鈥 initiatives that have taken off in at least 100 cities elsewhere since COVID-19 hit. Generally, the goal is to give residents stuck at home the space they need to safely exercise outdoors, keeping their distance from one another by moving off curbs and sidewalks.
In Seattle, the temporary road conversions were popular enough that some of them .
That may be extreme for Honolulu, but the least local officials can do is better accommodate the growing walking and biking demand.
The island is missing nearly 800 miles of sidewalk, and officials estimate it would cost more than $1 billion to build them all. The city has been removing crosswalks to discourage pedestrians from traversing certain areas instead of working to calm the traffic in those spots.
Quick-build projects could help fix that.
With their cheap and readily available materials, 鈥渢hese projects are affordable, dynamic, and collaborative by nature,鈥 Johnson said. Other notable quick-builds in town include the curb bulb-outs at Isenberg and South King streets.
To be sure, quick builds and other so-called “complete streets” projects often see vocal community pushback. The King Street protected bicycle lane generated enormous controversy when it was installed in late 2014.
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell once said his office heard more criticism of the bike lane than the city鈥檚 multibillion-dollar rail project, whose costs have skyrocketed.
The city continues to install protected bike lanes, including a new spur on Pensacola Avenue that will connect with King Street.
In 2017, some Chinatown community members protested a city bulb-out project, similar to the Kalihi design, saying it was an eyesore and impeded business deliveries. Later, a local artist worked to help them with the neighborhood鈥檚 aesthetic and character. The city last week said it’s moving forward on “upgrades” to the bulb-outs on Pauahi Street in that area.
鈥淥ur hope is that, over the coming months and years, we can work with counties and communities to develop quick build best practices,鈥 Johnson said in his email, to 鈥渇oster healthier, safer and more inclusive mobility options for all of Hawaii.鈥
COVID-19 has a lot more Oahu residents enjoying the outdoors. The Era of the Quick Build could keep it that way.
鈥淲e have lots of people … who are walking downtown, who are biking downtown,” Rooney said. “And there鈥檚 not enough space for a lot of them. That space isn鈥檛 being used by cars right now, so why can鈥檛 it be appropriated?鈥
Officials could redesign the street for six months or so, she said, then reassess. The advantage is the flexibility.
鈥淚f I鈥檓 wrong, we can change it back next year,鈥 she added.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
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
-
Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org