Honolulu's Movie Night at A'ala Park Not A Bright Idea

Dark and Gloomy Rainout Occurs in Honolulu Experiment

By ptosis, published Feb 25, 2007
Published Content: 86  Total Views: 51,268  Favorited By: 11 CPs
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One of the "Bright Ideas in Chinatown" contest winners is Kelfred Chang and his project called "A Night at 'A'ala Park," in a first effort to copy the Waikiki's successful "Sunset on the Beach" happened on Friday, 2/23/2007 in downtown Honolulu.

"Movie Night at A'ala Park" was an sweeping disappointment even before the heavy rains hammered the final nail in the event's coffin that occurred on the last day of the event, Saturday.

During the Friday night rush hour, I saw about thirty Honolulu Police Department officers at the start of the event as I stood at King and Iwilei. Clustered into three groups, the police were clearly for park duty only since no officer was posted for the pedestrian crossing from Iwilei to the park during the usual rush hour gridlock downtown.

Forget about the "Thin Blue Line," it was more resembling of a thick shag carpet of blue. A'ala Park is a city 'Pocket Park' in the densest population of urban Oahu. At ten thousand square meters or about 36,000 square feet in size, the park security probably cost more than the twenty-thousand check the City and County of Honolulu funded towards the event itself. Moreover, at a low estimate of forty cops, if evenly spaced throughout the park, there would've be one uniformed police officer per 82 square feet, in others words, a matrix of police every 30 feet.

Light attendance during Friday's sunset accentuated and brought into sharp focus the heavy police presence during the rush hour gridlock. Lack of security was not the reason why light attendance happened. After a long hard day of work, nobody wants to remain in the gritty downtown amidst a gridlock of idling cars with smoking exhausts.

Due to the newly enacted anti-smoking law that is the strictest in the United States, I asked a policeman about smoking a cigarette in the park. His answer was a qualified no, "Technically, not allowed to smoke in any public park, anywhere." He went on to say that although that interpretation is not currently being enforced, a smoker will be asked to step outside the area of kiddie rides and food and move to the edge of the park before smoking.

Honolulu's Movie Night at A'ala Park Not A Bright Idea
Honolulu's <em>Movie Night at A'ala Park</em> Not A Bright Idea

HPD on electrick chariots

Credit: ptosis

Copyright: ccrandal

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2 photos on the Honolulu Advertisers Photo Gallery of A'ala Park here http://haphoto.yoget.com/Upload/349fdd7b7f1e46aa8f5070e8b705a6ee.jpg http://haphoto.yoget.com/Upload/d47cf700b9b449ba8b92451333caa236.jpg

Posted on 02/26/2007 at 11:02:00 PM

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