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The road to the right leads down the “Onomea Scenic Drive,” a 4-mile (6.44 km) loop road that crosses several one-lane wooden bridges and past the Hawaiʻi Tropical Botanical Garden overlooking Onomea Bay before returning to Hawaiʻi Belt Road at mile 10 in Pepeʻekeō. Hawaii Belt Road crosses over Kolekole Beach Park
Hawaii Route 2000 is a 6.2-mile (10.0 km) road on the island of Hawaii, in the state of Hawaii. The road's western terminus is at Hawaii Route 200 (known as the Saddle Road). The eastern terminus is at Hawaii Route 11 (known as the Hawaii Belt Road) in Hilo where the Prince Kūhiō Plaza shopping center is located. [15]
0.802: 1.291 Hawaiʻi Belt Road (Route 19) Hawaiʻi Belt Road (Route 19) — — Old Māmalahoa Highway Route 226 — — Kauniho Homesteads: Route 19 (now Old Māmalahoa Highway) near Hakalau — — now Lepoloa Road; shown in 1969-1971 maps as well as early to mid 1960s DOT planning documents Route 227: 0.661: 1.064 Hawaiʻi Belt Road (Route ...
Route 19 at this point is known as Hawaii Belt Road, or Kawaihae Road. The northern terminus (where Route 250 is known as Hāwī Road), is in the town of Hāwī at 20°14′16″N 155°49′49″W / 20.23778°N 155.83028°W / 20.23778; -155.83028 ( Hāwī ) , [ 2 ] at the intersection of ʻ Akoni Pule Highway (Route
Route 560, or Kaua'i Belt Road-North Shore section, is a ten-mile (16 km) scenic road on the northern shore of the island of Kauaʻi in Hawaii. The entire belt road is signed as the Kuhio Highway. Hawaii Route 56 was once signed on this route before it was downgraded to become Hawaii Route 560 in the late 1960s. [2] The Kuhio Highway is named ...
Jan. 16—The state is rolling into the new year with at least four traffic-related fatalities, three involving pedestrians. The first traffic fatality of the year on Oahu occurred at about 7:44 p ...
Several restored trails include about one mile of the Māmalahoa Trail. [10] It was built in the mid-19th century, and evolved over the years into the Hawaii Belt Road which encircles the entire island. The coastal trail is part of the Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.