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Hawaii has never been the same since a bald, rotund tourist wafted in on the trade winds for a vacation in 1954. The tourist was Henry J. Kaiser, fresh from several careers as wartime shipbuilder, automaker, steelman and millionaire chief of a vast industrial empire. Vacationing with his second wife, Kaiser found hotel accommodations scarce on Honolulu's crowded Waikiki Beach, rented a house near Diamond Head, and sat back to wonder who would house the hordes of mainlanders he felt sure would discover the island's natural beauty and balmy climate. His predictable answer: Henry J. Kaiser...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TYCOONS: Henry J.'s Pink Hawaii | 10/24/1960 | See Source »

Thereupon Kaiser launched a new career as the biggest-and most controversial-booster and builder ever to hit Hawaii. He has already built about $50 million worth of hotels, hospitals, plants and housing developments and, at 78, feels that he is only beginning. Last week Kaiser showed off the first houses in his most ambitious project: Hawaii Kai, a projected $350 million dream city on the eastern end of Oahu Island, to be built on 6,000 acres between picturesque Maunalua Bay and Kuapa Fishpond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TYCOONS: Henry J.'s Pink Hawaii | 10/24/1960 | See Source »

Hawaii Kai, which Hawaiians call the "Pink Dream," will eventually contain about 11,000 single-family houses-ranging from $25,000 to more than $45,000-for some 75,000 people. Plans call for 20 miles of man-made beach, schools, country clubs and marinas. Like all of Kaiser's other Hawaii projects-including his hotels, his fleet of 200 vehicles, bulldozers and cranes, and his private navy of dredges-the houses in Hawaii Kai will feature Kaiser's favorite color: shocking pink. His engineers say the job will take ten years, but Kaiser insists it will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TYCOONS: Henry J.'s Pink Hawaii | 10/24/1960 | See Source »

Cement & Thatches. Kaiser started in a small way-for him. He bought $3,000,000 worth of land bordering on Waikiki, created his own beach and artificial lagoon, and started work on his Hawaiian Village Hotel. In short order, he built 70 thatch-roofed units, a million-dollar 100-room hotel, a 1,000-seat convention hall, a 14-story, 260-room Ocean Tower, an aluminum dome for the convention over flow, and a $1.5 million, 13-story hotel. Now being finished are a pair of $5 million, 17-story hotels called the Diamond Head Towers, which will give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TYCOONS: Henry J.'s Pink Hawaii | 10/24/1960 | See Source »

...result is that Becket's plans, unlike those of many less business-oriented architects, consistently turn into buildings. His clients, which include six of the top ten U.S. industrial corporations, often come back for more. He has completed five Hilton hotels, six projects for Kaiser. When Hallmark Card President Joyce Hall admired some card-display racks in a Pasadena store completely designed by Becket, he went to see Becket. Becket not only got Hallmark's business but a contract to build a home for Hall. He has since done eight Hallmark buildings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: Businessman's Architect | 10/3/1960 | See Source »

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