天美视频

John Pritchett/Civil Beat/2023

About the Author

John Pritchett

John Pritchett is an award-winning cartoonist. He has created artwork in Hawaii for decades, including 20 years at the Honolulu Weekly. See his portfolio on the web at: pritchettcartoons.com. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.


The Office of Hawaiian Affairs wants to build three 400-foot condominium towers and other developments in Kakaako Makai, right in the middle of Honolulu’s urban core.

Read Civil Beat’s coverage.


Read this next:

Hawaii Needs A New Approach To Housing


Local reporting when you need it most

Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.

天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.

Contribute

About the Author

John Pritchett

John Pritchett is an award-winning cartoonist. He has created artwork in Hawaii for decades, including 20 years at the Honolulu Weekly. See his portfolio on the web at: pritchettcartoons.com. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.


Latest Comments (0)

This is the story of every real estate development in Hawaii. You buy a house or an apartment and 5 years later your view is gone. I know people who left Honolulu specifically because their beautiful expensive apartment's view was blocked by a new development. Why pay so much for nothing? In some cities, they have zoning ordinances that protect the view corridors of existing buildings.

Kai · 1 year ago

I used to be on the other side with Save our Kakaako. But last year the office I once worked in closed, and by December it was demolished. I also helped a friend close his long time auto shop. While I helped close these businesses I saw people scootering around going to restaurants, the gym, in the once industrial area. I realized this isn't Kakaako I knew and was trying to save. It's more like downtown of a bigger city. It makes sense to actually build there and leave it to the city planners and HCDA to make sure these developers insure green space, sewer, schools, etc requirements are all met. Otherwise there isn't much that can be done with that land sitting on toxic soil.

surferx808 · 1 year ago

This piece of land was an exchange between the state of Hawaii and DHHL. One hundred yards away are multi-million dollar, multi-story apartment buildings that only non-residents can afford but now you want to limit what the organization that benefits Native Hawaiians can build? How fair is that? How just is that? I agree, I don't want another New York City in Honolulu, but it's already happening. The plans for the high rise are not set in stone, it's one option being proposed for the property. I'm just shaking my head at how people are reacting to the plans. Are you saying Hawaiians don't belong, shouldn't live in the downtown urban core, but the rich china businessman can and is allowed to live there?

chowrule · 1 year ago

Join the conversation

About IDEAS

IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

Mahalo!

You're officially signed up for our daily newsletter, the Morning Beat. A confirmation email will arrive shortly.

In the meantime, we have other newsletters that you might enjoy. Check the boxes for emails you'd like to receive.

  • What's this? Be the first to hear about important news stories with these occasional emails.
  • What's this? You'll hear from us whenever Civil Beat publishes a major project or investigation.
  • What's this? Get our latest environmental news on a monthly basis, including updates on Nathan Eagle's 'Hawaii 2040' series.
  • What's this? Get occasional emails highlighting essays, analysis and opinion from IDEAS, Civil Beat's commentary section.

Inbox overcrowded? Don't worry, you can unsubscribe
or update your preferences at any time.