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Resort famous for Elvis' Blue Hawaii movie will be rebuilt

The Coco Palms Resort on the island of Kauai will be torn down for a new 350-room hotel.

Resort famous for Elvis' Blue Hawaii movie will be rebuilt

Elvis Presley and Joan Blackman in a scene from Blue Hawaii that shows the Coco Palms Resort in the background. (Screen grab: Blue Hawaii)

Demolition will soon begin on a resort once favoured by both Hawaiian and Hollywood royalty before it was heavily damaged by a hurricane three decades ago.

The Coco Palms Resort on the island of Kauai will be torn down for a new 350-room hotel, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.

The resort is best known in movie lore as the location where Elvis Presley and Joan Blackman’s characters married in the 1961 movie Blue Hawaii.

It’s also the site of other key scenes in the movie, including the last where Presley sings the Hawaiian Wedding Song and holds Blackman’s hand while they board a raft to cross a lagoon.

Workers move the Coco Palms Resort sales sign away from the Kuamoo Road side of the former resort in Wailua, Hawaii, Sep 13, 2007. (Photo: AP/File/Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island)

In its heyday, it was famed for being frequented by other Hollywood stars like Frank Sinatra, Rita Hayworth and Bing Crosby.

The 46-acre (19-hectare) grounds were once home to Kauai’s last queen, Deborah Kapule, who died in 1853.

The resort opened in 1953 next to a historic coconut grove and an ancient Hawaiian fishpond. The property fell into disrepair after being damaged when the powerful Hurricane Iniki hit the island in 1992.

Several attempts to restore the property have failed over the years.

The US$250 million (S$333 million) project will take three years to complete, said Patrick Manning, a managing partner of Reef Capital Partners from Utah.

The Coco Palms Resort retail annex where one shop on the second floor was gutted by fire in Wailua on the island of Kauai, Hawaii, is pictured on Dec 3, 2009. (Photo: AP/File/Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island)

Reef Capital served as the lender to a previous developer and took over the property in 2018 when they defaulted on a loan. Manning said the plan was to sell the property, but that changed after he investigated its history.

“I called my partners, and I said, ‘This property is too important to sell,’” Manning said.

The new hotel and a cultural centre to honour the property's history will be built on about 10 acres (4 hectares) of the property.

At one time, the community wanted the resort rebuilt, but those sentiments have changed, said Kauai Council Chairman Mel Rapozo. “They don’t want to see a resort built,” he added.

Manning said something needs to be done or the site will be an eyesore for another 30 years.

“Even though we know there are many that don’t want it rebuilt, we intend to be viewed and earn a reputation for doing everything we can to honour its past and respect the people of Kauai and guests of Kauai and how we manage its future,” Manning said.

Source: AP/bk

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