The service along half of the route would see few daily riders, but officials say it’s time to let the public experience rail.
Honolulu city leaders say their long-sought goal to launch partial passenger service along Oahu鈥檚 elevated rail line, which they now plan to call 鈥淪kyline,鈥 is finally within reach.
The nine stations along the 10.7-mile stretch from east Kapolei to Aloha Stadium are slated to officially start service 2 p.m. June 30, officials announced Wednesday. The rides that day through July 4 will be free, but riders will need a valid Holo card to access the trains starting July 1, city transit officials said.
鈥淭his community has waited a long time for this project. It has suffered through fits and starts of the worst kind,鈥 Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi said at a press conference in the future Halawa rail station, across from Aloha Stadium, as driverless trains ran overhead.
Honolulu rail has seen its construction costs approximately double, its route trimmed by more than a mile, and its full opening delayed by more than a decade. The project鈥檚 previous leadership had hoped to launch partial service by the end of 2020, but failed to get that done amid procurement woes and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Blangiardi, who took office in 2021, had hoped to launch service last year, but problems with the system鈥檚 track layout and cracks forming in the rail line鈥檚 columns pushed the goal back even further.
鈥淣ow that we鈥檙e finally here, we want to celebrate this for the men and women who live here 鈥 and children 鈥 to ride,鈥 he said.
City transit leaders said they expect that limited service along the rail line鈥檚 western half will attract some 10,000 daily riders by the time it鈥檚 been operating a full year, many of them commuters who work at the Pearl Harbor naval shipyard and Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam.
The limited rail route falls short of key Oahu destinations, such as central Kapolei, the airport and downtown. It will, however, offer a reliable, 21-minute trip between east Kapolei and Halawa 鈥 reducing at least some of the uncertainty of the daily commute across Hawaii鈥檚 most crowded and traffic-plagued island, city transit leaders said Wednesday.
The city further plans to run added express buses to the Halawa station every 10 minutes or so, to transport passengers exiting the rail line into town and University of Hawaii Manoa.
The rail system is now expected to cost the city $94 million to operate in its first year, including $54 million paid to the rail鈥檚 operator, Hitachi Rail Honolulu, according to Roger Morton, the city鈥檚 Transportation Services director.
That annual operations and maintenance cost is expected to climb well above $100 million in subsequent years, as more stations come online farther east down the line. The city hopes to open five additional stations 鈥 the airport station 鈥 in two years.
Stll, Blangiardi said Wednesday that the $94 million cost is worth it.
鈥淥nce you get operational, it鈥檚 going to have its own impact (on the community). I鈥檓 really confident,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e want an enthusiastic response here, and we think we鈥檙e going to get that because the experience is going to be so unique. I鈥檒l tell you right now, having rode on the train, the view plane alone is going to surprise people.”
‘By And Large’ Ready To Go
The Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation, the semi-autonomous agency that鈥檚 building rail, is slated to formally hand over the first 10-plus miles of the system to the city sometime in the coming weeks, city officials said at Wednesday鈥檚 press event.
HART Executive Director Lori Kahikina said her agency expects to have the crack repairs done this month.
There shouldn鈥檛 be any other 鈥渢echnical issues鈥 affecting the transition to passenger service, Kahikina added Wednesday.
Previously, city transportation employees working on the project, as well as a former consultant, have expressed concerns that the rail agency did not properly resolve its track-crossing woes and that the situation could lead to costly city repairs once the system opens. Nonetheless, Kahikina and other HART officials have repeatedly stated that their fixes are solid.
Morton on Wednesday said he further anticipates that the state will provide its own, necessary approvals in order for the service to begin.
鈥淏y and large we鈥檙e ready to go,鈥 he said.
Fares on the train will be the same as those for TheBus, according to Jon Nouchi, the deputy director at the city鈥檚 Transportation Services Department. Transfers between TheBus and the rail line will be treated the same as transfers between bus rides, he added.
The city鈥檚 daily and monthly price caps will also apply to rail, Nouchi said. Under those caps, riders are charged no more than $7.50 for using transit in a day and no more than $80 during a calendar month.
Under this initial limited service the rail line will operate 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays, and 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekends and holidays, city transit leaders said. As the city opens more of the system for use it will run the trains later into the night, probably until 11 p.m. or midnight, Nouchi said.
If the passenger service launches as city officials hope it will occur approximately 15 years after city voters approved the project, in November 2008.
鈥淪ome people measure this from 2011, when (federal) money was available鈥 for the project, Morton added at Wednesday鈥檚 event. 鈥淢yself, I go back to 1968鈥 – that鈥檚 when city leaders first officially included the concept for a rail system in the Oahu Transportation Plan to help serve the island鈥檚 westside commuters, he said.
Those leaders realized that simply adding more freeway capacity would not handle the growing demand, Morton said.
DTS spokesman Travis Ota confirmed the city plans to call the rail line 鈥淪kyline.鈥 It鈥檚 still developing the branding and logos, and plans to make a formal announcement of the name sometime in the coming weeks, he added.
Nouchi, meanwhile, invoked a traditional Hawaiian proverb on Wednesday to tout Skyline鈥檚 imminent opening: meaning 鈥渘o work is too big if we all work together.鈥
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org