Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Sunday, December 15, 2024 78° Today's Paper


Overall, what do you think about the transformation of Kakaako?

  • C. Too much; negative (751 Votes)
  • A. Exciting; positive (297 Votes)
  • B. OK, I guess (242 Votes)

This is not a scientific poll — results reflect only the opinions of those voting.

17 responses to “Overall, what do you think about the transformation of Kakaako?”

  1. awahana says:

    Kakaako is the culmination of greed. Foreigners who have it, and developers who want it. Kamaainas have a shorter nickname for it now, just omit the ‘ako’ suffix…

  2. Cellodad says:

    I really didn’t pay much attention to Kakaako until my son and I got back into diving. I would like to see a greater evidence on ocean access for everyone.

    • sailfish1 says:

      The developments aren’t hindering access to the ocean. They are not oceanfront. Even the homeless have plenty of access.

    • dragoninwater says:

      Nooo, you don’t say. You’re intimidated by the tent-city residents giving you dirty looks as you pass by their tents of distinction!? How dare you insult and look down on the new “D” voters and recent kamaaina from the mainland!

  3. Masami says:

    Remember 40 years ago when Ala Moana Center truly catered to local folks? Then sometime in the 1990’s ? the higher end stores started moving in and basically transformed the place? Seems the same’s happening to Kakaako.

  4. oiwi808 says:

    (Former Politrixter) Todd Apo said on the news last night the EVERYONE deserved to be able to live in a place that was close to work & recreation….Right after that Joe Moore repeated 3 times….Condos STARTING at $4.5 MILLION. $4.5 MILLION????? Yeah right Mr Apo.

    • MakaniKai says:

      “Politrixter” oiwi808 I love that hybrid to describe most politicians especially local. I see Todd Apo is surfacing after laying low for about four years after leaving the City Council for Disney – of course after being handsomely paid (bribed).

      Oahu is overpriced due to poor planning, overpopulation and greed of local “politrixers” period! Quality of life on Oahu is in steady decline. Very sad indeed.

      • oiwi808 says:

        Growing up I always believed that I would never leave Hawaii…like they say, never say never. Although there is no place like home, home is no longer like home anymore either.

  5. bruddahcy says:

    Whenever there is development, its all about politicians and developer greed. LOL…

  6. Husky77 says:

    They should significantly raise the property tax on all new residences that are appraised over $2,000,000 to help the local economy and citizenship.

  7. jankenpo says:

    Only for the rich

    • dragoninwater says:

      Yes, poor government servants like Krook Caldwell need two jobs to make ends meet! My heart bleeds as they suffer from kleptomania by resorting to asking for bribe money and kickbacks to the tune of millions to put caviar and foie-gras on the table to feed their kids.

  8. wrightj says:

    It looks quite stunning, viewed through binoculars from 5 miles away.

  9. jussayin says:

    Too much traffic as it is. We must have a lot of drinking water though since no one is concerned about it.

    • dragoninwater says:

      Krook Caldwell’s choo choo will solve the traffic issue. It’ll allow the residents to get some healthy exercise to walk from Kakaako to Middle street and then take the rail all the way to… well nowhere because it seems to go to absolutely nowhere. Maybe it’ll fall off the cliff at the other end right into the ocean and then the riders can drink sea water just like the fish do. Drinking water problem solved now too! Good thing many of these new places are all at a cool $1+ million and being bought by foreigners. They qualify to pay 200% more in property taxes to fund the choo-choo to nowhere.

  10. sukebesan says:

    I can’t wait for Moofi’s choo choo project to start construction in the Kakaako area and ending at Ala Moana Shopping Center. Good luck to those living, working, or transiting/traveling through, or visiting that area.

  11. leino says:

    Go up not out… go tall not sprawl. To have an upscale urban high rise district is a fine idea … just no every where. Keep the Country Country … discourage gentrification.

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