Vacant Spaces to Vibrant Places

Re-Envisioning Downtown Honolulu & The Chinatown Arts District

Downtown Honolulu and its historic Chinatown Arts District are in trouble. Once the vital heart of the Pacific business community, multiple circumstances, including economic downturns and the COVID pandemic, has changed a once-vibrant area into a struggling historic arts, entertainment, and restaurant district with blocks of abandoned real estate and rising crime and vandalism.

However, with change comes opportunity. The time is right to start the conversation about how Downtown Honolulu and the Chinatown Arts District can be transformed into a vibrant community that attracts both locals and visitors alike. Downtown Art Center’s Vacant to Vibrant project, with several phases planned, aims to prove that these vacant spaces can come alive again, as valuable hubs of art, creativity, and community involvement.

Phase 1: Vacant to Vibrant Community Arts Pop-Up Studio, July 19 - August 14, 2022

Chinatown Gateway Plaza’s Suite C, vacated during the COVID pandemic, is the former space occupied by the Strode Montessori preschool. Now vacant, it provides the opportunity for a month-long community arts pop-up. Programming will include art and crafting workshops, arts organization meetups, open studio sessions, live art, music, sip & paint events, and more!

Pop-Up Events
July 19 August 14

 

Phase 2: ‘From Vacant to Vibrant: Re-envisioning Downtown’ Gallery Exhibition, Coming in 2023

“From Vacant to Vibrant: Re-envisioning Downtown” is a visual art exhibition, to be held in Downtown Art Center’s second floor exhibition space, that seeks to engage members of Honolulu’s art, architectural and design, business, urban planning, and youth communities to present their ideas in a multidisciplinary show that visualizes how to transform Downtown Honolulu and the Chinatown Arts District into a vibrant gathering place. Stay tuned for more details!

Photo by Christopher Edwards: Volunteers remodeling Downtown Art Center, a space at 1041 Nuuanu Ave. that was formerly vacant City & County of Honolulu offices.