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Central Oahu Regional Park Tennis Facility Honolulu, Hawaii
Tennis, a sport originally established in France and Great Britain and still very popular in the Western Hemisphere, is now exploding into Asia-Pacific countries. The International Tennis Federation views Asia as the next major opportunity for growth of the sport. The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) season-ending championships are now held in Shanghai, China. The 100-year old Australian Open recently began to brand itself as the official Grand Slam of the Asia-Pacific. In 2004, the Chinese women’s doubles team captured that nation’s first gold medal in Olympic Tennis. Hawaii is anxious to capitalize on the growth of tennis among Asians and its strategic location as a tourist destination and midpoint between Asia and North America. This mindset helped drive Honolulu to promote tennis as a major focal point for the new Oahu Central Regional Park.
Honolulu used the grant to bring in The Hawaii Pacific Tennis Foundation to manage the Central Oahu Regional Park’s tennis complex. Over the next three years, the foundation has promoted Hawaii’s sports tourism industry, secured prestigious state and national tournaments to improve visibility of tennis in Hawaii, and supported residential recreational use of the facilities to build tennis as a more prominent sport in Oahu. In 2003, the complex was proclaimed one of 20 winners of the United States Tennis Association’s (USTA) Facility Award. In 2004, the USTA National Junior Open was held at Central Oahu Regional Park for the first time. In 2005, the City and County of Honolulu diversified the park even further by building and dedicating the Veteran’s Memorial Aquatic Center. The aquatic center, like the tennis complex, is now used for larger tournaments and competitions such as the Hawaii State Swimming Championships.
Contact: Lester K.C. Chang, Director Images: Top — Oahu . Middle — Project Site. Bottom — Tennis court.
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