Honolulu Rail Transit: International Lessons from Barcelona in Linking Urban Form, Design, and Transportation
Geoff Boeing

TL;DR
This paper examines how Barcelona's urban design and transit integration can inform Honolulu's new rail system, emphasizing pedestrian accessibility, urban form, and social considerations to enhance livability.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of Barcelona's urban transit planning and offers lessons for Honolulu's rail development, focusing on design, accessibility, and social equity.
Findings
Barcelona's urban form promotes accessibility and livability.
Lessons from Barcelona can inform Honolulu's transit planning.
Potential concerns include privatization and displacement risks.
Abstract
The city of Honolulu, Hawaii is currently planning and developing a new rail transit system. While Honolulu has supportive density and topography for rail transit, questions remain about its ability to effectively integrate urban design and accessibility across the system. Every transit trip begins and ends with a walking trip from origins and to destinations: transportation planning must account for pedestrian safety, comfort, and access. Ildefons Cerda's 19th century utopian plan for Barcelona's Eixample district produced a renowned, livable urban form. The Eixample, with its well-integrated rail transit, serves as a model of urban design, land use, transportation planning, and pedestrian-scaled streets working in synergy to produce accessibility. This study discusses the urban form of Honolulu and the history and planning of its new rail transit system. Then it reviews the history of…
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