Waimea Bay on Oahu just got harder to reach, and there will not be a quick cleanup. The state says already hectic daytime traffic on Kamehameha Highway by the beach is now squeezed into a shared single contraflow lane from 5 a.m. to 7:59 p.m., with a full overnight closure from 8 p.m. to 4:59 a.m. That comes on top of a stretch that was already one of the island’s frustrating places to drive and park on Oahu’s North Shore, even before the recent storm damage.
We were there just a couple of weeks ago, before the heavy rain and the damage, which is now forcing this roadwork. It was already a traffic cluster. The Waimea Bay parking lot was one of those places where you could keep circling and still get nowhere. We did exactly that and never found parking. So when HDOT says access is now narrowed to one lane by day and fully shut down at night, it is piling new restrictions onto a place that was already hard to use.
What is closed at Waimea Bay and when.
According to HDOT, both lanes of Kamehameha Highway will be closed nightly for about 600 feet between the Waimea Bay parking lot and Iliohu Way. The nightly full closure starts Wednesday, March 18, and runs from 8 p.m. until 4:59 a.m. the next morning. During the day, the mauka or northbound lane reopens for alternating traffic only, with flaggers controlling vehicles from 5 a.m. to 7:59 p.m.
Visitors heading up for sunset, late dinners, or early morning beach time are not looking at a minor lane shift. This is one of the busiest stretches of road on Oahu, and it is now a bottleneck.
Why this happened is all about the slope.
HDOT says the slope above the road continues to slough after the Kona low, heavy rain, and vegetation loss. The road itself has been inspected and described as “stable,” but the state says the slope’s surface continues to deteriorate to the point that it could threaten the highway if left alone. The interim stabilization is currently estimated by DOT to take about two weeks, but this is fast evolving. The long-term fix is still being designed.
What the detour actually means.
HDOT’s alternate routes are not simple. Drivers coming from the west or central Oahu toward Ko’olauloa are being told to use H-3 or Likelike through Kaneohe, Ka’a’awa, and Laie. Drivers coming from the Kahuku or Laie side toward Haleiwa are being told to go back toward Honolulu, then use H-1 west and H-2 north to reach Kamehameha Highway through Wahiawa…