The bulldozing and desecration of Hawea Heiau in Maunalua (Hawai'i Kai) is a travesty.
Mahalo. Our kupuna are calling out to us for help.
I have heard them and this blog is given them a voice in this blog site - people can see and read what's going on and help Hawea.
Just a few things:
In discussion with kupuna and cultural experts they have shared a heiau is not just the temple that is sacred - the materials; rock walls, structures etc, - but it is the land itself that is sacred. This is why you'll find one heiau built over another through history, they are building on the sacred site. Parts of Hawea have been bulldozed but they can be rebuilt on the same land because the land is sacred, the land is the link between humans and the our Hawaiian gods.
When I wrote "A copy of this agreement was supposed to have been shared with the community before any work was done per information provided by the SHPD office. "
To be completely clear, a copy of the agreement was supposed to have been given to the community by the developer before any work was done per information provided by the SHPD office.
The bulldozing and desecration of Hawea Heiau in Maunalua (
Aloha
annmarie@hawaii.rr.com
Friday, November 5, 2010
Hale Alii Is out, Hale Ka Lae is in
Catherine Cruz KITV4 News Reporter
http://www.kitv.com/news/25574993/detail.html
A controversial project formerly known as Hale Alii is being renamed as Hale Ka Lae-- house at the point-- which reflects its location at the corner of Keahole Street and Hawaii Kai Drive.Newly hired Chief Executive Officer Mike Greco says the landowners Hanwa Corporation wanted to go back to the drawing board after a falling out with the community over the bulldozing of cultural sites in a marsh area.
The owners were also taken to task over the original name Hale Alii, which some considered culturally offensive. In Hawaiian, Alii means royalty.“We formed an advisory council and employed some local historians to come up with some names,” said Mike Greco.They settled on Hale Ka Lae.A new management and design team is on board to reflect the change in direction the owners are taking. What was planned to be three separate structures on eight acres, built in phases, will now be a single ten story complex on three acres.“Totally different look, both inside and out,” said Greco.
Greco said the project will be a distinctive world class development unique to Oahu and will essentially the same amenities that Hale Alii was offering.“The design in general, will set it apart. It is different where the building and the internal courtyards are situated. It will have, I want to say, a lot more character,” said Greco.Earlier this week, community members with the Livable Hawaii Kai Hui briefed the Hawaii Kai neighborhood board about negotiations underway with the developer to buy and protect the adjacent marsh land.
The Trust for Public Land said hopes to purchase the five acre parcel and keep the cultural sites and native habitat for endangered birds in perpetuity.The original plans called for 297 units. Hale Ka Lae will be more dense, with 342 units for sale. Prices will start at one point four million dollars. Groundbreaking is expected in spring of next year.
Greco also said he has an agreement with the city to build 56 affordable rentals. While the landowner has the option of building those units on site, it is likely to be built elsewhere.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Hawea Heiau Saved
Group to buy cultural site from builder
A developer of land in Hawaii Kai agrees to sell a 5-acre parcel to a community hui
A rendering shows the original design of the Hale Alii condominium, which is being redesigned and renamed Hale Ka Lae.
The developer of a planned a luxury condominium in Hawaii Kai that drew protests over the treatment of cultural artifacts on the site has agreed to sell part of the land at the heart of the controversy to a community group for preservation.
The tentative deal involves the roughly 300-unit project recently renamed Hale Ka Lae from Hale Alii, at the corner of Keahole Street and Hawaii Kai Drive.
If completed, the sale will help advance the long-delayed project, which enjoyed early support from the Hawaii Kai Neighborhood Board before trouble over the cultural site erupted.
Under the agreement, the nonprofit Livable Hawaii Kai Hui would buy five acres of the 8-acre project site for $650,000.
The 5-acre parcel, which is zoned for preservation use and contains ancient Hawaiian petroglyphs and other historical features connected with a pre-contact Hawaiian village, had been slated to become a private landscaped park with features including lagoon-style waterways, floating cabanas and a sand-edged pool with ozone-purified water.
The condominium would still be built on the three acres as previously planned, though it is being redesigned. Construction is anticipated to begin early next year, according to the developer.
Cultural preservationists hail the agreement as something that will create a cultural piko, or central point, for Hawaii Kai instead of a private playground that would have destroyed many historical features.
"It's a huge turnaround," said Ann Marie Kirk, a Livable Hawaii Kai Hui member. "We went from being threatened with being arrested and threatened with lawsuits to a place where the community has a chance to acquire this sacred place in perpetuity. It's pretty amazing. This is so great."
Monica Salter, a spokeswoman for Hale Ka Lae developer Hanwha Engineering & Construction, said the company is pleased to be working with the nonprofit on a plan that will enhance the community and the condo project.
But because some aspects of the transaction are not final, the developer reserved additional comment.
The sale is not a done deal, but Livable Hawaii Kai Hui is hopeful it will be completed.
The nonprofit partnered with another nonprofit, the Trust for Public Land, to help facilitate the purchase.
Trust for Public Land has submitted applications for two $325,000 grants from the state Legacy Land Conservation Program and the city Clean Water and Natural Lands Fund.
Laura Hokunani Ka'akua, native lands coordinator for the trust, said the site has a rich cultural value given the presence of a heiau complex, ancient dwelling sites, petroglyphs, agricultural terraces, a coconut grove, remnants of a spring-fed well and a wetland that is home to the endangered alae ula, or Hawaiian moorhen.
"This site is really like a treasure," Ka'akua said. "It's in the middle of Hawaii Kai, one of the most built-out communities on Oahu. This little 5-acre property, which is walking distance from a Costco, is a reminder of our ancestral past."
A stewardship plan will be created to restore and preserve the site, which could include rebuilding parts of the Hawea Heiau complex some historians believe was on the site.
Though state officials believe Hawea Heiau was not located on the site, many other archeological features on the property have been well documented by surveys over the last few decades. Other features are believed to have been destroyed by previous owners of the property.
At one time the 5-acre parcel was to become a public park, but that requirement was eliminated by the city. Condos may not be built on the site because it is preservation-zoned land.
The Hale Alii development plan originated with Mike Klein, a local developer primarily involved in affordable housing projects.
Klein became interested in building affordable homes on the site about a decade ago to fulfill a city requirement for affordable housing tied to surrounding housing projects built without affordable units.
In 2003, Klein completed the 31-unit Kaluanui Senior Apartments on an adjacent site.
As a way to help finance additional affordable housing, Klein proposed building them with a mix of luxury condos. Recreational amenities were planned on the preservation parcel as part of the condo complex. Units in an initial phase were listed for $1.3 million to $3.7 million.
Last year, cultural preservationists grew alarmed after Klein began grading part of the 5-acre parcel without proper approvals, including an archaeological monitoring plan.
Livable Hawaii Kai Hui member Kirk and other concerned residents claimed the work destroyed some important features, though the developer had approval from the state Historic Preservation Division to destroy all but three petroglyphs and the wetland.
Kirk said she and others trying to document more features on the site were threatened with arrest by Klein.
Several area residents and a few neighborhood board members also had received letters from an attorney on behalf of Hale Alii Development threatening legal action if they did not remove or refrain from making alleged false and defamatory statements about the project.
Last year, Hanwha Engineering & Construction, a South Korean investor, replaced Klein as the project's lead developer and hired Mike Greco, a former construction vice president with Chicago-based developer Fifield Cos., as chief operating officer.
Greco publicly pledged about six months ago to end the discord, and began meeting with Livable Hawaii Kai Hui and other community members.
Those meetings progressed into negotiations to sell the preservation parcel.
Elizabeth Reilly, a neighborhood board member and president of Livable Hawaii Kai Hui, said the developer took a "huge step" by agreeing to sell the parcel.
"It's quite impressive," she said. "This speaks volumes as it relates to good work between the community and development when you sit at the table with a willing attitude."
KHON2Reported by: Marisa Yamane
Email: myamane@khon2.com
A conservation group is hoping to purchase five acres of land in Hawaii Kai next to The Oahu Club.
The property includes a heiau and a wetland that's home to endangered birds.
It's still in the preliminary stage, and it all depends on whether the group can get the hundreds of thousands of dollars it is asking for from the State and City.
Amidst all the houses, condos and other buildings in Hawaii Kai, there's a five-acre parcel of land off Hawaii Kai Drive where you can still find petroglyphs, ancient burial sites, ancient house sites, and an ancient well.
It's where a Hawaiian fishing village used to be, and where Hawea Heiau is located.
"There's numerous cultural sites that connect us to our ancestral past," said Laura Hokunani Ka'akua, The Trust for Public Land.
This parcel also includes a wetland, which is home to as many as nine of the remaining 300 endangered 'Alae 'Ula birds.
'They're the bird famous for bringing fire to the Hawaiians in the legend of Maui," said Mardi Laprade of Hawaii Kai.
The group Liveable Hawaii Kai Hui wants to preserve this parcel of land from future development, and has sought help from the non-profit group "The Trust for Public Land," which presented its idea to the Hawaii Kai Neighborhood board tuesday night.
"This resolution we're asking for tonight will hopefully show the community support to these different funders," said Ka'akua.
The Liveable Hawaii Kai Hui has put in an application with the State DLNR, requesting $325,000, and with the City, also requesting $325,000 in an effort to purchase the five-acre parcel of land.
"This land owner has been very agreeable and open about working with The Trust for Public Land," said Ka'akua.
The land owner also owns the adjacent parcel, where there are plans to build a luxury condo.
Last year residents were upset when they learned that construction crews buried a section of Hawea Heiau.
"But under this new management they are deeply apologetic and are now supporting the community groups that want to acquire property," said Ka'akua.
No price has been agreed upon yet, but the Liveable Hawaii Kai Hui believes it'll be in the $650,000-range.
"People need a place to live but we have to balance development with conservation and preservation," said
Tonight, the Hawaii Kai Neighborhood Board voted unanimously in favor of supporting the acquisition of the land for conservation.