Maybe we’re “out of place in our own neighborhood”

My parents bought a small 3-bedroom home along Kealaolu Avenue in Kahala at the beginning of 1942, when it was located on the boundary between the city and the country.

“When we gave directions of where we were, we used to say that we were on the last street within the city limits because many businesses didn’t deliver past here,” my mother, Helen Yonge Lind, said in an oral history interview in 2000.

They stayed in the house for the rest of their lives, and over those seven decades, the neighborhood changed dramatically around them.

A 2006 story in Pacific Business News by Janis Magin captured the angst my parents, both then 92, were experiencing.

The backyard of John and Helen Lind’s Kahala home is seeing more shade from the afternoon sun these days.

The house viewed from the back yard.

It’s not from the large mango tree they planted behind their home in 1947, but from the two-story home being built next door, which towers over the Linds’ 63-year-old single-story house on Kealaolu Avenue.

On the other side of the Lind home, a concrete foundation awaits the frame for another two-story house. A concrete block wall erected over three days in June replaced Helen Lind’s croton hedge, which had separated the two properties for years.

Sandwiched between these two residential construction projects is the 1,200-square-foot, three-bedroom house the Linds bought in 1943 for $6,000, “less $100,” John Lind said. “There was a scratch on the floor.”

But, Magin wrote, Kahala was being redeveloped at a rapid pace.

“Solid yet aging homes like those owned by the Linds are fast disappearing, replaced by massive designer homes that dominate the mostly 10,000- to 12,000-square-foot lots,” she wrote, noting that “[t]he new construction is not only changing the look of the neighborhood, but the economics as well.”

It has become a high-priced area where even teardowns can sell for several million dollars.

The conclusion of the PBN story circled back to my parents’ view.

The Linds’ house takes advantage of the trade winds and the outside, with a small yard filled with flowers and fruit trees. But given its age and size, it likely would be considered a teardown if they were to put it up for sale, something the couple, who are both in their 90s, don’t plan to do.

Helen Lind remembers the days when homes had good-sized yards and neighbors knew each other, before the walls were built around big new houses.

“They’re out of place here,” she said of the new homes, then paused. Maybe, she said, “we’re out of place in our own neighborhood.”

I remember my mother’s rather wistful memories of the old Kahala, before walls and gates and security systems cut neighbors off from each other.

I grew up knowing that there was a 7-foot panax hedge between our house and the neighbors on either side, ostensibly providing lots of privacy, but there were also three-foot gaps through the hedges, evidence of the frequent visits back and forth over the years.

“It’s not the same,” my mother would say about her home and her neighborhood. I don’t recall her saying that the new crop of homeowners had wrecked the neighborhood, but that was certainly what I understood was behind her words.

Being of a certain age, I’m now no stranger to that feeling of being “out of place.”

He said with a sigh.


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9 thoughts on “Maybe we’re “out of place in our own neighborhood”

  1. Jane

    I’m feeling that way about America….out of place. Just no integrity in Presidents, Congress, Justices! Was it an illusion? Well Trump is fast tracking the destruction of the U.S. Constitution.

    Reply
  2. Margaret

    I know what you mean – sending a hug your way.
    The back yard with the two lovely trees planted by your mom in honor of you and your sister.
    It is all so precious.

    Reply
  3. Beverly

    It’s sad that people don’t value yards anymore. They just want concrete sequestering them from the outside.
    It’s the same thing here in SF, cover the entire lot if you possibly can.

    When I return and look at childhood homes, instead of one house in a nice yard,i see two or even three houses on the lot. And they’re proposing the same for San Francisco.

    Reply
  4. John Miller

    Same here (Maui). Some housing developments in Kihei have neighborhood covenants which forbid the planting of fruit trees. Auwe!
    Not that there is any room left on the lots.

    Reply
    1. Ian Lind Post author

      That makes my head spin! Is it more than one development that has this kind of restrictive rule/covenant?

      Reply
      1. John Miller

        Actually, I am aware of only one near the Safeway shopping complex in Kihei. An acquaintance owns a house in this neighborhood and he told me that he couldn’t plant fruit trees due to their covenants. I have no doubt that others exist.

        Reply
  5. Anonymous

    I’m glad there are thoughtful folks like you in our neighborhood. We live on “outskirts” of Kahala, mostly still long-time family homes at our end of the street. But walking the neighborhood, I see what you mean.

    Reply

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