Honolulu Complete Streets

Urban Core

Overview

Urban Honolulu is transforming. In accordance with smart growth principles and transit oriented development, the city is concentrating future development within Honolulu’s urban growth boundary and in proximity to future Skyline stations. This densification will require a sustainable transportation network within the urban core, including transportation alternatives for those that can’t or don’t wish to use a car for all of their daily trips. With this transformation, Honolulu can realize the social, economic, and environmental benefits of becoming a more safe and walkable city.

Through its Complete Streets program, the City and County of Honolulu is committed to implementing complete streets solutions that improve safety, accessibility, and comfort for all users, encourage physical activity, and reflect community needs and character. 

 

The Opportunity

Our projects in the Urban Core span diverse neighborhoods from Chinatown to Sheridan Tract. They includes some of the densest corridors on Oahu, home to key neighborhoods, business districts, schools, shopping centers, cultural institutions, government facilities, and medical facilities. In anticipation of the growing population of the Urban Core area of Honolulu, the City is studying safe and equitable improvements for Honolulu’s metropolitan center. A wide variety of outreach activities have been completed for the Urban Core Complete Streets projects, including eight “Sit Down Sessions”, four “Pop-ups”, six Walking and Biking Charrettes, and more than 30 meetings and presentations with community organizations, business associations, schools, major employers, landowners, elected officials, developers, and other stakeholders. 

The project designs were informed by extensive community input gathered as a part of the Urban Core Complete Streets and Downtown Chinatown Complete Streets projects. The outreach activities for these two projects included more than 24 community meetings, 72 stakeholder meetings, and various other outreach platforms, collectively gathering more than 1,600 public comments.  Complete Streets are: 

  • Safe and convenient for people of all ages and abilities
  • Accommodating to all modes, including foot, bicycle, transit, and automobile
  • Integrated with the community’s vision and sense of place
  • Supportive of community health and transportation equity

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Current and Upcoming Projects

Keʻeaumoku Street

Keʻeaumoku Street provides important mauka-makai connections between Makiki, Ala Moana, and major east-west corridors. The study area encompasses Keʻeaumoku Street from Kapiʻolani Boulevard to Wilder Avenue. The project team has collected and analyzed data, studied existing transportation patterns, and worked closely with community members and stakeholders to identify design solutions that balance the needs of all those who use the street. Keʻeaumoku Street is programmed for major roadway rehabilitation, and this road-paving project provides a cost-effective opportunity to implement appropriate safety improvements. Safety improvements being considered include, but are not limited to, improved pedestrian crossings, protected bicycle lanes, and traffic calming.

The purpose of this projects is to transform Keʻeaumoku Street into a “Complete Street,” with a street design that balances the needs of people of all ages and abilities whether they are walking, using a wheelchair, on a bike, riding transit, or in a car. Keʻeaumoku Street is programmed for major roadway rehabilitation, and this road-paving project provides a cost-effective opportunity to implement appropriate safety improvements.

Plans

Click thumbnails to view and/or download plans.

If you require an auxiliary aid/service, other accommodation due to a disability, or an interpreter for a language other than English, to read these plans, please call Daniel Alexander at (808) 768-6652 or email completestreets@honolulu.gov.

A proposed plan for street improvement
Kapiʻolani Boulevard to King Street
Street safety improvement concept plans
King Street to Kinaʻu Street
A proposed plan
Kinaʻu Street to Wilder Avenue
Community Meetings

Lower Pensacola Street Pedestrian/Bikeway Improvements

In November 2023, The Hawaiʻi State Department of Transportation (HDOT), in partnership with DTS, installed four new raised crosswalks fronting McKinley High School on Pensacola Street at Elm, Rycroft, Hoʻolaʻi, and Kamaile Streets. IIn an effort to increase safety, reduce motor vehicle speeds, and prevent collisions, the raised crosswalks are an interim treatment to improve safety until the future implementation of the full Complete Streets plan for the corridor.

The City and County of Honolulu is planning to implement improvements along Pensacola Street between Waimanu Street and South King Street. This would include improvements to pedestrian crossings, complete the missing sidewalks between Waimanu Street and Kapiʻolani Boulevard, and extending the two-way protected bikeway to Waimanu Street. These improvements are proposed to provide safer and more direct connections to and from Kakaʻako, Ala Moana Shopping Center, and Ala Moana Regional Park for both pedestrians and bicyclists.

The project area encompasses Pensacola Street from Waimanu Street to South King Street, and the project area is broken into two segments:

Segment 1, from Waimanu Street to Kapiʻolani Boulevard: Improvements include incorporating missing sidewalks, reconfiguring on-street parking, extending the two-way protected bikeway, and adding crosswalks and pedestrian signals on the Diamond Head side of the intersection with Kapiʻolani Boulevard and Waimanu Street.

Segment 2, from Kapiʻolani Boulevard to South King Street: Improvements include pedestrian crossing safety improvements, curb extensions, reverse-in angle parking, and a lane reconfiguration to address speeding issues while maintaining capacity.

Please click the link to view a Reverse-In Angle Parking How-To Video

For questions and/or comments on the Lower Pensacola Street Pedestrian and Bikeway Improvements project, please contact Daniel Alexander, Project Manager, Department of Transportation Services at (808) 768-6652, or via email at completestreets@honolulu.gov .

A proposed plan for street safety improvement
Lower Pensacola Plans
Plan proposal for street improvements
Pensacola FAQs

Plans

Click thumbnails to view and/or download plans.

If you require an auxiliary aid/service, other accommodation due to a disability, or an interpreter for a language other than English, to read these plans, please call Daniel Alexander at (808) 768-6652 or email completestreets@honolulu.gov.

Plans for Pensacola Street
Pensacola 30 Percent Plans
Community Meetings
Meeting #1 Materials:
HCDA Meeting Materials:
Meeting #2 Materials:

Honolulu Safer Streets

Map of streets included in the Honolulu Safer Streets initiative

The Complete Streets Office has launched the Honolulu Safer Streets initiative with the goal to improve traffic safety along seven of Oʻahu’s highest-crash corridors.

This initiative is funded through the Federal Highway Administration’s Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) grant — a competitive federal grant program focused on preventing roadway fatalities and serious injuries.

The planning effort will develop traffic safety improvements for seven key corridors: South King Street, Beretania Street, Young Street, Kapiʻolani Boulevard, Wilder Avenue, Piʻikoi Street, and Kāheka Street.

These corridors were identified through crash data analysis conducted as part of the Oʻahu Vision Zero Action Plan. Although they comprise only a small portion of the island’s roadway network, they account for a disproportionate number of serious injury and fatal crashes. As busy urban streets, they serve thousands of pedestrians, bicyclists, transit riders, and motorists daily, while providing critical connections to schools, employment centers, commercial areas, and other major destinations.

Through this initiative, the City will work with our communities to identify potential street design changes and safety improvements that will prevent crashes and save lives. Public input will be solicited throughout the process in a variety of ways.

The planning effort began in late 2025 and is expected to continue through 2027, resulting in a set of actionable, implementable safety projects.

Interactive Map

Click on the interactive map to view community comments about issues residents encountered, or ideas community members have to make the area safer and more accessible for all.

Visit Complete Streets Interactive Map

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