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What’s a TOD? And Why Does it Make Sense for Kona?

Kona’s award-winning Community Development Plan (CDP) paves the way for new approaches to planning. The approach we’ll be talking about during the Honokohau Village charrette is Transit Oriented Development (TOD).

Need a quick briefing on what TOD is all about? Here’s a Q&A to orient you. For more Frequently Asked Questions about the charrette, see our FAQ page.

October 16th, 2009 at 10:22 am No Comments   |Read More

Interested but Time-Strapped? Here’s a Guide to Charrette Sessions

If you only have limited time to participate in the charrette, when should you come?

Remember, first of all, that during the charrette, we’ll regularly post updates right here on the website. So you don’t have to miss anything. You can follow events as they unfold. And you can comment or post questions at the bottom of every story. [...]

October 15th, 2009 at 11:53 am Comments (3)  |Read More

Kona CDP Gets First Big Test: Public “Charrette” Begins Oct. 21

The hard work of defining long-term planning goals for Kona is done and embedded in the Kona Community Development Plan (Kona CDP) enacted into law in September of 2008. Now, Kona community leaders and residents will join with County of Hawai`i staff and consultants to apply key concepts in the award-winning CDP to the first major project to be designed under the Plan: The Honokohau Village. [...]

October 6th, 2009 at 12:25 pm No Comments   |Read More

Standards Set High for Kona Planning as CDP Attracts Applause from APA

Barely a year-old as a County of Hawai`i ordinance, the landmark Kona Community Development Plan (CDP), is already winning awards.

On Thursday, September 24, during the 2009 Hawai`i Congress of Planning Officials conference at the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel, the state’s chapter of the American Planning Association awarded the CDP its 2009 Outstanding Planning Award. [...]

October 5th, 2009 at 4:42 pm No Comments   |Read More

  • Big Ideas Become Reality as Kona
    “Charrette” Applies Community Development Goals

    “This is a whole new way of planning,” says Margaret K. Masunaga, deputy director, County of Hawai`i Planning Department. “That’s what makes this so exciting.”

    The immediate focus of this new planning experience in Kona is the Honokohau Village, a 80-acre site that includes the new West Hawai`i Civic Center. But the broader aim is educational.

    As County Planning Director Bobby Jean Leithead Todd explains in this video, this is the first major project to be planned under the award-winning Kona Community Development Plan (CDP), enacted into law in September of 2008. During the multi-day public “charrette," residents and community leaders, developers and builders, and County officials and staff will get to see how new guidelines apply to a real project in a real place.

    “We’ll use this experience to learn from and to teach one another,” says Masunaga, who was hired by Mayor Billy Kenoi and Planning Director Bobby Jean Leithead Todd to oversee Planning Department activities in West Hawai`i. Masunaga is a resident of Captain Cook in South Kona and lives on a Kona coffee farm.

    “By the time we’re finished, we’ll all know exactly what it means when we say ‘TOD’ and what the term implies for development in Kona,” says Masunaga.

    TOD stands for Transit-Oriented Development, a neighborhood development approach encouraged under the new Kona CDP. The transit orientation comes into play when development can be designed to make the most of not only personal automobile travel, but also biking, walking, and transit. A TOD, in fact, maximizes the advantages of mobility choices so that people representing a wide range of ages, abilities, and incomes can share the advantages of living, working, and playing in a compact, walkable community.

    The Kona CDP provides much more than guidance for TODs, of course. It prescribes goals for putting Kona-appropriate development in the right places, in the right scale for those places, and in the right relationships to surroundings. The upcoming Kona charrette will customize Village Design Guidelines described in general in the Kona CDP specifically for the 40-acre, transit-oriented site around the West Hawai`i Civic Center.

    “So we’re not just talking about planning for transit, walking, biking, and cars,” says Masunaga. “We’ll also use the charrette to set standards for Honokohau Village that will include building setbacks and heights, the width of streets and sidewalks, the mix of building types, allowable density ranges, and the placement of public parks and other open space. The result will be a village design that encourages a true neighborhood atmosphere.”

    Conventional planning approaches often complicate community-building goals. “In the not so distant past,” says Masunaga, “we planned subdivisions that were disconnected from one another and where people without access to automobiles were isolated. The disconnections affected all sorts of other things, including infrastructure investment, environmental protection, and public services like police and fire fighting. “

    “One of my dreams,” Masunaga says, “is that my seven-year-old daughter will be able to safely walk just about anywhere she needs to go for her daily needs. That’s not possible in most places in Kona now.

    “Mahalo nui loa to everyone who made the Kona CDP a reality. Now we can implement the policies to guide the Planning Department and the Planning Director on how we want Kona to look like in the next twenty years and into the next generation.”