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HONOLULU INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT PLANS
UPGRADES
These are some of the improvements planned by the
state at the airport:
People-mover project
The Third Level International Arrivals Corridor
project consists of building an enclosed air conditioned corridor
that will allow international arrival passengers who deplane from
Gates 26-34 in the 'Ewa Concourse — where 80 percent of
international passengers arrive — to walk to the Federal Inspection
Station in the 'ewa extension of the Overseas Terminal. This will
eliminate the need for the Wiki Wiki Bus service in that area.
When: Bids were opened on March 22.
Construction expected to begin September and take two years to
complete.
Cost: More than $30 million.
Prime design consultant: CDS International
New Wiki Wiki Bus (two types)
Contract: Solderholm Sales and Leasing
What: Plan to buy eight 80-passenger
air-conditioned and diesel-powered tractor-trailer buses with
delivery of pilot vehicle for testing expected by Feb. 2008.
Remaining seven vehicles within the next year.
Cost: About $5 million
What: Plan to buy three 26-passenger smaller
buses, also air-conditioned. First to arrive in August.
Cost: About $900,000
New parking structure
Add at least 1,000 parking stalls in new garage to
be located in open-air lot between inter-island and overseas
parking.
When: Break ground later this year.
Cost: $27 million, and an additional $16
million is in the proposed budget pending legislative approval.
In-Line Explosive Detection System
Phase 1: Integrate security screening with
other baggage handling at the Interisland Terminal, relocating the
screening equipment to the airport's lower level, getting it out of
the ticket lobby and helping to ease the line as well as the look.
Cost: $16 million contract awarded to Western
Engineering.
When: Construction began April 2006 and
tentatively scheduled for completion in September 2007.
Phase 2: Shift security screening to behind
the counters at the Overseas Terminal.
When: Design scheduled to be completed in
June. Cost to follow.
Electric Cart Assist
The state has purchased three electric vehicles that
can carry up to six passengers each in a form of transportation most
similar to a big golf cart that can help tote passengers for free
from the checkpoint to the gates. The cart is an added service which
can handle a passenger in a wheelchair but its designed to help
those who might use a cane or be traveling with young children.
The cart operates daily from 6:30 a.m. until 10:30
p.m. One has been working for the past few weeks, helping 150-200
people daily with two more expected to arrive in the next several
weeks.
Cost: Each cart cost $31,925.20 for a total
of $95,776. The state purchased them from E-Vehicles of Hawaii.
Source: state Department of
Transportation |