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Hawaii Route 30

State highway on Maui, Hawaii From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hawaii Route 30
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Hawaii Route 30, also known as the Honoapiʻilani Highway, is a 35-mile-long (56 km)[1] road on West Maui, Hawaii. It begins in downtown Wailuku, extending south through Waikapu and Maalaea. The Olowalu Tunnel, located at mile 10.4, is 318 feet (97 m) long.[2]

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Following terrain of the island, the highway circumvents the West Maui Forest Reserve connecting Olowalu, Launiupoko, Lahaina, Kahana, through the regions of Kapalua and Honolua, and ending in Honokohau Bay. At this point the road continues as the Kahekili Highway, a "notoriously narrow and twisty" county-maintained road covering the northern coastline of West Maui and eventually terminating back in Wailuku.[3] The eastern part of Kahekili Highway is signed as Hawaii Route 340. The two highways together, plus a short stretch of Hawaii Route 32, complete the circular journey around West Maui.

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Major intersections

The entire route is in Maui County.

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Hawaii Route 3000, also known as the Lahaina Bypass, is a highway that bypasses the town of Lahaina. The bypass opened to the public on April 23, 2018.[5]

The bypass has its northern terminus in Downtown Lahaina along Keawe Street, before becoming the Lahaina Bypass, a four lane highway with occasional at-grade intersections, looping around the town, ending its at southern terminus at the Honoapiilani Highway.[5]

Hawaii DOT plans call for a much longer bypass to be constructed in the near future, with the possibility of moving the Route 30 designation to the bypass highway.[citation needed]

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References

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