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STATE HISTORIC BRIDGE INVENTORY AND EVALUATION 2024 UPDATE <br /> 1.0: INTRODUCTION <br /> 1.1 OVERVIEW <br /> The Hawaii Department of Transportation (HDOT) is tasked with maintaining and managing bridges <br /> throughout the State of Hawaii, along with individual County departments of transportation. Many of <br /> these bridges meet or are approaching an age that warrants consideration as a historic property <br /> pursuant to state and federal historic preservation law. Projects that utilize state or federal funding <br /> must consider alternatives that are feasible and prudent before adversely affecting a historic property <br /> through undertakings that may include alterations, repair, and/or replacement of historic bridges. In the <br /> 1980s and 1990s, historic bridge inventories have been prepared for each island and combined into one <br /> document in 2008. Because of the volume of bridges in Hawaii, an efficient process for identifying <br /> bridges that are eligible for listing in the Hawaii Register of Historic Places (HRHP) and National Register <br /> of Historic Places (NRHP) was developed in 2013 through efforts that resulted in the 2013 State Historic <br /> Bridge Inventory and Evaluation (SHBIE) by MKE Associates LLC and Fung Associates, Inc. <br /> Since publication of the 2013 SHBIE, HDOT has utilized the inventory to aid in project planning by <br /> identifying known historic bridges that may be affected by HDOT activities. This 2024 update builds <br /> upon the information from the 2013 SHBIE and an earlier bridge report completed by The Heritage <br /> Center in 2008 under the supervision of Spencer Leineweber of Honolulu, Hawaii. The current scope of <br /> work did not involve re-visiting the already developed bridge historic contexts or other major elements <br /> of the previous bridge inventories. Where possible, efforts were made in this 2024 SHBIE update to carry <br /> forward all relevant and useful information from the 2013 report. The following has been largely carried <br /> over from the 2013 report: Chapter 2, Chapter 3 (sections 3.0-3.7 with edits to text and footnotes where <br /> necessary), 2013 survey forms for bridges not receiving updated forms, Appendix E, and Appendix F. The <br /> SHBIE has been updated to include State and County bridges constructed from 1968 to 1977, identifies <br /> bridges that may have been substantially altered since the 2013 SHBIE, and reevaluates 100 bridges <br /> HDOT identified as "Priority Bridges" as part of future project planning activities. Of these 100"Priority <br /> Bridges," all but two were state-owned. The SHBIE update also provides a historic context for 1968-1987 <br /> (section 3.8)to cover the completion of Interstate H-1 and the beginning of construction for Interstate <br /> H-3. <br /> 1.2 REGULATORY BACKGROUND <br /> STATE LAW <br /> Hawaii Revised Statutes(HRS), Chapter 6E (1976) <br /> Chapter 6E of the HRS regulations requires the "development of a statewide survey and inventory to <br /> identify and document historic properties."1 The State Historic Preservation Officer(SHPO) is required to <br /> coordinate the activities of the political subdivisions of the state in accordance with the state plan for <br /> historic preservation. Further, HRS § 6E-8, Review of effect of proposed State and County projects, <br /> requires HDOT to provide the State Historic Preservation Division (SHPD) with an opportunity for review <br /> 1 State of Hawaii, §6E-3 Historic Preservation Program, under Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 6E, <br /> http://www.state.hi.us/dlnr/hpd/hpfctsht.htm (accessed April 1, 2013). <br /> o� 1 <br />