Ala Moana Beach Park

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Aerial view of Ala Moana Beach Park and its beach. Magic Island is on the right.

Ala Moana Beach Park is a free public park on the island of Oahu, U.S. state of Hawaii, located between Waikiki and downtown Honolulu. This 100-acre (0.40 km2) park has a wide gold-sand beach that is over a half-mile (800 m) long.

Protected by a shallow reef offshore, it is one of the most popular open ocean swimming sites in Hawai’i, with an estimated 4 million visitors annually. However, there are sharp corals, so most people prefer the east end of the beach (the one that's closer to Diamond Head) where the ocean bottom is sandy and has no reef or rocks. The middle section and west end of the beach has rocks on the nearshore ocean bottom, which makes entering the ocean trickier. Lifeguards are stationed on the beach daily.[1][2]

Ala Moana's ocean bottom drops quickly, so novice swimmers should use caution. Big grassy areas, banyans and palm trees make the park a good place to picnic, barbecue, play various ball games or go running. There are lifeguards, showers, restrooms, phones, tennis courts, picnic tables, food concessions and a music pavilion. Ala Moana Beach Park is a favorite among Honolulu residents. It is right next to "Magic Island" where many cultural events are held.

The park is closed from 10:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m.[3] Police enforce the closure with citations and arrests.[4]

Like almost all of Honolulu's city parks, Ala Moana Beach Park had many homeless people during the day and night, until the city started closing the park for the night in 2006.[5][6] Fodors travel guide rated it a "high crime area" at night after dark partly on this basis.[7]

History[]

Ala Moana Regional Park as we know it today rests on reclaimed land that was once swampy marshland. In the 1920s Ala Moana Beach Park was a wetland with bulrushes, kiawe trees, and coconut palms that the city used as a garbage dump. The land appears to have been included in land transferred to the US government following annexation. The federal government then deeded the land back to the Territory of Hawaii and then the city of Honolulu in 1927, with the condition that the property be used wholly as a public park.[8]

In 1931, the Parks Board designated the land as Moana Park and initiated development. The Hawaiian Dredging Company deposited their dredgings[9] much of which was coral reef to fill in the marsh. The park added a sport pavilion, lawn bowling green, Banyan court, and bridal path bridge. The pavilion includes murals painted by and bas relief sculptures made by Marguerite Louis Blasingame. The bowling green was designed by Henry Sims Bent.

Dredging created two ponds and drainage canals, which allowed runoff of natural water. The bridges and entry portals were also designed by Henry Sims Bent.[10]

There was no beach; swimming was discouraged because of the presence of two nearby sewage outfalls.[11]

Franklin Delano Roosevelt dedicated the park in 1934.

The Sports Pavilion, Banyan Garden, tennis courts, and murals by Robert Lee Eskridge were completed in 1937 as part of the New Deal efforts by the Civil Works Administration and the Federal Emergency Relief Administration. While the Federal government provided the labor, local resources were required for construction materials. Construction of the walls and terraces used a technique called concrete boulder construction. This allowed use of inexpensive materials and tools and local workers with limited construction experience.[12]

During World War II (1941-1946), the park was used as a staging area and military battery. The military constructed barracks, an armory, and temporary fortification to support a heavier presence of personnel and weapons[13] .[14]

Originally named Moana Park, the Parks Board changed the park’s name to Ala Moana, “path [to the] sea” in 1947.[15] Originally named Moana Park, the Parks Board changed the park’s name to Ala Moana, “path to the sea in 1947.[8]

The beach was created in 1954. The deep swimming area fronting the beach is a former boat channel that was dredged through the coral reef in the late 1920s to join Kewalo Basin with the Ala Wai Harbor.

In 1955, Hawaiian Dredging Company closed the west end of the channel with a landfill, now Kewalo Basin Park. Originally dredged for boat traffic, the channel is 20 to 30 feet deep and 1,000 yards long. From 1957 to 1961, concession stands and bathrooms were added. Henry Kaiser suggested the creation of a “magic island” of hotels, theaters, and swimming pools. The existing park would have been made into a parking lot.[16]

The land was constructed in 1962 through the reclamation of thirty acres of shallow reef. Named Magic Island by the developers, the peninsula was the first phase of a resort hotel complex that called for two more islands to be constructed on the reef off Ala Moana Beach Park. After public outcry,[17] the project stopped after the development of Magic Island, leaving the State with a man-made peninsula, which they converted into a public park. In 1972 the State officially renamed Magic Island ‘Aina Moana, or “land [from the] sea,” to recognize that the park is made from dredged coral fill, but residents still call it Magic Island.

McCoy Pavilion was added to the Diamond Head side of the courtyard in 1975 and is named after Charles Lester McCoy, who presided over the creation of the park in the 1930s. McCoy’s widow donated $1.2 million for construction after her death.[18][19][20] McCoy Pavilion is currently used for special events such as the annual Greek Festival [21] and the Hawaiian Scottish Festival and Highland games.[22]

The park was added to the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places in 1988.[23]

Improvement Plans[]

The city of Honolulu has proposed an improvement plan for Ala Moana Beach Park and Magic Island.[24] The proposal includes changes to parking, replenishment of the beach sand, renovations to canals, ponds, McCoy Pavilion, the lawn bowling and canoe halau areas, repairs to the canal bridge and park entrances, improved pedestrian access near Piikoi and Queen streets, and the addition of a dog park and playground. The proposed changes to parking and the dog park have been controversial, so the city has amended the proposals and sought additional public comment.[25]

Of note, changes to parking have been controversial in the past; the 1975 park plan called for cars to be prohibited from the park roadways and three multistory garages for cars to be built.[26]

See also[]

  • List of beaches in Oahu

Coordinates: 21°17′19″N 157°50′54″W / 21.28873°N 157.84826°W / 21.28873; -157.84826

References[]

  1. ^ City and County of Honolulu. "Ala Moana Regional Park". Department of Parks and Recreation. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
  2. ^ "To-Hawaii - Ala Moana Beach Park".
  3. ^ Department of Parks and Recreation. "Park Closure Times".
  4. ^ Hawaii News Now. "Homeless crackdown catches Waikiki tourists".
  5. ^ Stacy Yuen (January 2014), Homelessness in Waikiki
  6. ^ Mary Vorsino (April 22, 2015), What Are We Doing to Fix Hawai'i's Homeless Crisis?
  7. ^ Jess Moss; Linda Cabasin; Mark Sullivan, eds. (2012), Fodor's Hawaii 2013, Fodors, p. 88, ISBN 9780307929273
  8. ^ a b Weyeneth, Robert (8 March 2015). "The People's Park, page 9". Department of Parks and Recreation.
  9. ^ History of Dillingham Corporation - Official Web Page
  10. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 17
  11. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 34
  12. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 26
  13. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 33
  14. ^ City and County of Honolulu Department of Design and Construction, December 2017, Environmental Impact Statement Notice Preparation Notice Ala Moana Regional Park and Magic Island Improvements (PDF)
  15. ^ Ala Moana Regional Park Improvements (PDF)
  16. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 38
  17. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 41
  18. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 23
  19. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 16
  20. ^ "Ala Moana Park: The Sports Pavilion and Banyan Court - Honolulu HI".
  21. ^ Greek Festival - Official Page
  22. ^ "Hawaiian Scottish Festival and Highland games- Official Page". Archived from the original on 2018-11-16. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  23. ^ Historic Hawaii Association Ala Moana Park - Official Page
  24. ^ Department of Design and Construction City and County of Honolulu. "Ala Moana Regional Park and Magic Island Improvements Draft Environmental Impact Statement, July 2018" (PDF).
  25. ^ Hawaii New Now, August 17, 2018. "Residents Voice Concerns About City's Latest Plan for Ala Moana Park".
  26. ^ Robert Weyeneth (1987), The People's Park, p. 26

External links[]

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