Pau Hana & Kick-Off 2015 RECAP

November 03, 2015

AIA Center for Architecture, Honolulu

 

A big thank you everyone who attended the Pau Hana and Kick-Off 2015, the event was a success!

On November 3rd, the Shade Institute held a gathering at the AIA Center for Architecture to introduce the Chinatown Urban Acupuncture Project. Dean Sakamoto introduced the Shade Institute and spoke about the group's purpose and intent for improving the community through architecture and design. Shade interns Woody Simpson and Justin Wong followed with a presentation of their research, analyses, and overall experiences through their participation in the program. The presentations were then followed by food and drinks with discussion around a scale model of Chinatown.

 

 

 

Poster by Stephanie Chang    www.stephanieink.com

Poster by Stephanie Chang    www.stephanieink.com

HPR-2: The Conversation

Walk through Honolulu’s Chinatown and the clashes of building styles and ways of life quickly come into view. Chinatown’s community came together last month for the Chinatown Action Summit. Since then, an organization that goes by the acronym SHADE - that stands for Sustainable Humanitarian Architecture Design for the Earth- has offered workshops to follow up on City-sponsored Summit. Part of the makeover mix includes an urban planning and design technique- that’s part of movement in other cities. SHADE founder and architect Dean Sakamoto is here to school us in Urban Acupuncture.
— HPR-2
Listen to the Conversation

Chinatown Urban Acupuncture: Strategic Planning and Tactical Design Recap

Council member Carol Fukunaga welcomed Chinatown Stakeholders to kick-off the second community design workshop at Hawaii Heritage Center. SHADE Interns presented their Strategic Vision Plan Concepts and Tactical Design Projects which stimulated much discussion. Nearly all Stakeholders expressed their views and give advice on the future development of Chinatown. Many stressed the need to increase economic growth through small business development. Dr. Anil Mehta of Kawa Mamua, a cutting-edge oral history software and his colleague Dr. Kealani Cook of UH West Oahu spoke of the importance of understanding the past as we move forward with planning. Pono Shim, of Enterprise Honolulu, thanked the Interns for their hard work and contribution to Chinatown. The next step is for SHADE Interns to consolidate the visions and project ideas in response to oral and written feedback from the Stakeholders.

Workshop #2 Results
Multigenerational Family Community
Historic and Culture Center
Reconnecting Chinatown

Chinatown Urban Acupuncture: Assessing Chinatown Recap

Workshop #1 Diagrams

Thank you for all the participants and support from the community.

SHADE Interns shared their Chinatown documentation and analysis with a group of stakeholders at this workshop. Residents, members of neighborhood organizations, city government, land and business owners attended. Poet Wing Tek Lum opened the event with a reading of his poignant piece “The Butcher.” The Interns unveiled the large Chinatown architectural model upon which workshop participants applied their own “urban acupuncture” using color coded needles.