Waipio Point Access Road Multimodal & Safety Improvements (WPARMSI) Community Design Workshop 4.0

10.png

SHADE Institute and its community partners invited a range of stakeholders to participate in the Institute’s first virtual community design workshop. The workshop kicked off with introductions from SHADE’s 2020 Summer Fellows, who are graduate students working on the preliminary design phase of the project. Meeting facilitators provided a brief overview of the WPARMSI project. Fellows introduced SHADE director, Dean Sakamoto and project champion, Mary Pat Waterhouse. Workshop participants also provided their own introductions.  

Fellows then provided a deeper look into project updates and the overall design proposal. SHADE Fellows will be completing the preliminary design phase this summer. This fall, the pre-final design phase will start and be completed as well. For more information, please refer to the presentation provided below. 

Following the project presentation, the workshop divided into three break-out group sessions happening simultaneously. A series of 6 questions pertaining to the Waipio Access Point Road lead the discussion while break-out group leaders provided virtual tours of the site through an interactive map. Questions covered pedestrian safety, traffic flow along the road, flooding conditions, parking issues, among other concerns. Stakeholders gathered in small groups and discussed their feedback, shared their memories of the site, and debated the feasibility and potential of design proposals.

The meeting concluded with everyone coming back together from break-out sessions. SHADE Institute is seeking the valuable voices and stories of the community members—we encourage your input through our survey and questionnaire. We also welcome the opportunity to become further involved with SHADE through our Friends of WPARMSI Citizen’s Group where updates on upcoming neighborhood board meetings offer opportunities to publicly testify in support of this project.

CLICK HERE TO TAKE THE SURVEY AND BE AUTOMATICALLY ENTERED TO WIN ONE OF THREE $10 DON QUIJOTE GIFT CARDS!

*Deadline to complete survey: Sunday July 26. Winners will be notified by the end of the month.

Arts & Transportation Rapid Response Grant Application for Chinatown

Dean Sakamoto and Chinatown property owner, Ave Kwok shared the Institute's intent to improve the safety and commerce around the Hotel/Maunakea Street corridor to a COVID-capacity gathering at the Downtown-Chinatown Neighborhood Board Meeting on June 4, 2020. The Institute has applied for a Smart Growth America Arts & Transportation Rapid Response Grant Application that will address COVID-19 mitigation through artistic and design intervention in multimodal transportation zones. 

Hotel Street is a dedicated bus  & bike corridor within Chinatown's narrow streets and sidewalks at which businesses, pedestrians, and homeless people converge without enough space for routine passage and newly required social distancing. As a result, bus stops are congested and conflict with businesses that have suffered financially and are now unsafe especially with after-hours homeless encampments.

The Institute is seeking area property owners, businesses and residents to collaborate as stakeholders for this effort. SGA funding will be announced by mid-June. Interested parties should contact the Institute at shade.institute.hi@gmail.com or (808) 591-5558. 

Hawaii Public Radio's Noe Tanigawa provided excellent coverage of this highly attended meeting on The Conversation on June 5, 2020:

https://www.hawaiipublicradio.org/post/conversation-reopening-restaurants-dine  

For info on the SGA grant see:

https://smartgrowthamerica.org/program/arts-culture/arts-transportation-rapid-response-application/  

61302526840__DFA8EC9D-9FFC-4BB3-8F70-7300B9E4B62F.JPG

Concept Site Plan and Park Visualizations

Kanehili Community Association Park moves forward with design development! This uniquely Hawaiian park will have several features native to the islands such as a lei garden, Imu, Hula mound, and an area for native games such as Ulu Maika and Konane. Sustainability also takes shape with native planting of local trees and shrubbery as well as Solar PV Panels on several of the park’s buildings. The Community Center, found towards the center of the park, takes its form from native architecture while modern design maximizes air flow, light, and comfort in this unique gathering space. But that’s not all! Play features include a Basketball Court, Playground, Playfield, and even a Splashpad for the kids to cool off in under the hot Hawaiian sun! For further information take a look at the images below!

Site Plan.png
Aerial.png
Persp.png