Renaissance
Ilikai Waikiki Hotel Opened in 1964
As Hawaii's First High-Rise, Luxury Hotel
HONOLULU, Hawaii (2003)—The year was 1959 and Hawaii became the 50th state of the United States. It was in this year, at age 57, Chinn Ho, a self-made multimillionaire, had a vision to add a contemporary classic to Waikiki—The Ilikai, a landmark hotel and residential condominium at the gateway to Waikiki.
Born in Hawaii in 1903 (died in 1987), Chinn Ho spent his early years working in his family’s rice fields, within a stone’s throw of the land he would later develop. Revealing entrepreneurial skill even as a child selling kiawe (mesquite) beans at 15 cents a bag, Ho parlayed his talents into a variety of businesses—always approaching new opportunities with energy and enthusiasm.
He began his rises to fortune at a time when Asians were excluded from plantation management, corporate boardroom and any prestigious clubs. His adult career began as a messenger for Dean Witter but he developed into a banker and a stock-broker. From 1961 to 1971, he owned the Hawaii newspaper, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin—a paper that he once peddled on the streets in Honolulu. He became a major force in the business community as president of Capital Investment Corporation. Ho was welcomed as the first Asian-American president of the Honolulu Stock Exchange and was first to sit on the board of one Hawaii’s “Big Five” corporations, Theo H. Davies & Co.
The Hawaii developer raised $27 million to bring to life The Ilikai—a dream that became a reality in 1961 when the project broke ground. The monkeypod tree at the poolside courtyard was planted at the time of the groundbreaking ceremony by Ho and world famous Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanomoku. Kahanomoku, a five-time Olympic medallist, and Ho were McKinley High School classmates and lifelong friends.
On February 29, 1964, Chinn Ho forever changed the landscape of Waikiki when The Ilikai (translated in Hawaiian as “surface of the sea”) opened its doors as Hawaii’s first high-rise luxury resort. Overlooking the recently expanded Waikiki Yacht Harbor with views of the Pacific Ocean, the project included 1,050 guest rooms and condominium apartments.
Designed by architect John Graham, whose credits include Seattle’s famous Space Needle, the three-winged, Y-shaped Ilikai was an architectural landmark for Waikiki. Thirty stories high and standing at the entrance to Waikiki, it was one of Hawaii’s tallest high-rise buildings in 1964. Its glass elevator, Hawaii’s very first, was one of the highest-reaching in the world.
The Ilikai’s angular lines, its innovative use of pre-cast, pre-stressed concrete, as well as its white and turquoise façade, defined it as distinctive for its time as were its landmark predecessors—the Victorian-era Moana Hotel and the Mission-style Royal Hawaiian Hotel.
The Ilikai’s landmark status was further enhanced when Hawaii Five-O featured the hotel in its dramatic opening sequence—a sweeping panoramic shot of Jack Lord as Steve McGarrett standing on his Ilikai penthouse balcony surveying Waikiki with aerial views of the Pacific Ocean and Diamond Head. This television hit series featured a character, also a developer, named after the real life Chinn Ho. Other television series chose The Ilikai for episodes such as Magnum P.I., Raven, and Jake and the Fatman.
In the 1960s, rates for the
new luxury hotel were $12 per night for mountain-view accommodations and $27
for prime oceanfront guest rooms. One- and two-bedroom suites with full
kitchens were priced at $35 to $100 per night. Facilities included four
restaurants, with the Top of the I (now Sarento’s) offering sweeping
views from Diamond Head to the distant Wai‘anae Mountain Range.
Celebrity guests over the years have included presidents, ambassadors, Olympic
athletes and entertainers. Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Gerald Ford have been
Ilikai guests, as have Henry Winkler, Dolly Parton, Mickey Mantle, Elvis
Presley and Lucille Ball.
Luminaries of Hawaii’s entertainment scene have performed at The Ilikai,
including Hilo Hattie, Palani Vaughn, Gabby Pahinui, Peter Moon and the
Brothers Cazimero, establishing a top rank reputation for Ilikai venues like
the legendary Canoe House, which opened in 1966 as one of Honolulu’s most
popular night spots. The location is now the site of the hotel’s wedding
chapel.
The hotel’s success quickly led to plans for a
$10-million expansion that saw the addition of the elegant Pacific Ballroom. In
1974, having fulfilled his dream, Chinn Ho sold the property to for $35
million. In 2000, the hotel was reflagged as the Renaissance Ilikai Waikiki
Hotel, a franchise of Marriott and managed by Interstate Hotels.
Nearly 40 years since its opening, Renaissance Ilikai
Waikiki Hotel celebrates the beginning of a new era in 2002. Ho’s $27-million
development has recently received more than $27 million in enhancements,
completed in March 2002. A celebration of the renovation completion and
dedication of a Wyland whale art sculpture, which graces the hotel entrance,
took place on March 6, 2002.
Kalia: The Waikiki Area Where
Renaissance Ilikai Waikiki Hotel
Now Stands
Today’s
Renaissance Ilikai Waikiki Hotel is linked to a period when coconut palms
towered over thatched hale (houses) and fishponds were built for
Oahu’s highest chiefs.
Kalia,
the Hawaiian community where The Ilikai resides, was enriched by its
beach-lined contact with the sea and the free-flowing waters of the Piinaio
Stream. Fed by the rains falling over the lush velvet Ko‘olau Mountains, the
stream wove a braided course through Kalia’s coastal wetlands, creating a
broad, fan-shaped delta.
The
Hawaiians who first settled in Kalia between the 12th and 14th centuries
redesigned the landscape, draining wetlands and building the walls and
irrigation channels that made the area a maze of fishponds linked by narrow
footpaths. Most of these fishponds were royal preserves. It was in the 1450s
that the legendary ruling chief of Oahu, Mailikukahi, established Waikiki as
the royal capital of his island kingdom. There was much to justify the
selection of Waikiki and Kalia as a gathering place of the high-born. Its
reef-sheltered waters provided easy access to the open sea—perfect for
harvesting seaweed, as well as reef and deepwater fishing.
By
the start of the 20th century, Hawaii’s political and economic ties to the
United States created a new dynamic society. While native Hawaiian families
remained in Kalia, they were now neighbors to families such as the Enas and
Paoas, as well as famed Olympic swimmer and renowned surfer Duke Kahanamoku’s
family line. Hawaiians shared Kalia with the Hobrons, Cassidys, and Bickertons
who built Victorian mansions on the coast.
While
Kalia retained the pace and feel of a tightly knit, local community, the 20th
century saw the opening of some of Waikiki’s first guesthouses and small hotels
for vacationers making the five-day cruise from California.
The
1920s brought even more dramatic changes to Polynesian Waikiki, as more
wetlands were drained and Kalia’s fishponds and taro patches were removed. In
their place a new Waikiki would evolve, creating new opportunities for
development.
Commercial
jets made Hawaii more accessible to travelers, marking the beginning of a new
era for Waikiki—as it transformed from a sleepy neighborhood to one of the most
popular travel destinations in the world.