Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
September 2022 – "The Federal Transit Administration has approved the Honolulu rail's financial recovery plan which outlines a truncated version of the rail line, 1.25 miles short of Ala Moana Center." [132] May 2023 – Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi and the Department of Transportation Services announces that Phase 1, which is the first ...
Kahauiki station (also known as the Middle Street–Kalihi Transit Center) is an under construction Skyline station in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi.It is being built as part of the second phase of the Skyline route, scheduled to open in Summer 2025.
TheBus' origin was The Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Company, which operated buses and trolley lines mostly in the Honolulu district, while most outlying areas were serviced by competing bus companies. Honolulu Rapid Transit (HRT) was founded on June 6, 1898, the same day that Hawaiʻi was annexed by the United States. HRT started streetcar ...
Pearlridge Center, Arizona Memorial, Aloha Stadium, Alapaʻi Transit Center, Ala Moana Center, and Honolulu Convention Center. Service operates every 15 minutes weekdays, every 20 minutes on weekends.
Kālia station (also known as Ala Moana Center station) is a planned Skyline station in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. It will be located near the Ala Moana Center, a major shopping mall and the location of the city's largest bus transit center. The station was included in the original plan for Skyline but had to be eliminated from the initial phases of ...
Kaʻākaukukui station (also known as Civic Center station) is a planned Skyline station in the Our Kakaʻako district in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. It will be built as part of the third phase of the Skyline route, scheduled to open in 2031.
A new transit center south of the station, with six bus bays and covered waiting areas, is planned as a future addition. The City and County of Honolulu estimates an additional 3,400 homes of 8,874 residents can be built within a ten minute walk of the station as part of long-term transit-oriented development projects. [6]
Honolulu sought to initiate a rail transit system as early as the 1960s. By the mid 2000s, studies had finally been conducted and a light metro line was planned for the city's western suburbs. Construction started in 2011 and was set back by various delays until Skyline opened to service in 2023. [2]