Lahaina, Hawaii (Maui) has been completely destroyed by fires

ShustOne@lemmy.one to pics@lemmy.world – 385 points –

High winds from a hurricane fed fires in Maui, HI. A fire swept through Lahaina Town. Once the capital of Hawaii this place was really popular with tourists and locals. I can't believe the amount of destruction that happened in less than 12 hours.

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That black blob in the middle looks like the remains of the banyan tree, which was planted 150 years ago and covered 2/3rds of an acre. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banyan_tree_in_Lahaina

Lahaina was probably my favorite town among the 4 Hawaiian islands I’ve been to. Very sad. Hope they can rebuild.

Oh man that makes me sad. I remember seeing that when I was 12 on a trip there and it being the coolest tree I had ever seen.

Yeah, that husk of a building to the left of the banyan tree was a museum. That sucks, that whole area was so nice, tons of shops, restaurants, lots of homes, I think that was a school in the bottom right corner.

I have childhood memories in this town, the tree really sticks with you, and the heritage there is/was quite notable. Very sad to see this unfold over the last few days.

Any time you have to jump into the sea to avoid the flames it's bad. It's very bad.

Video of someone trying to evacuate Lahaina last night, pretty apocalyptic: https://www.instagram.com/p/Cvt93fktqtZ/

Holy fuck.

I've been on the Internet for almost 30 years and that's one of the most intense videos I've ever seen.

Even as a person who's gone through the Almeda fires in Southern Oregon, this is one of the most horrifying videos I've watched. The entire area seems to be engulfed in flames, I hope everyone is able to evacuate safely.

I know a flight attendant who was scheduled to fly there today. The hotel they would've stayed at burned down.

Really awful to see. Hope there's minimal loss of life and they're able to rebuild quick, but I know there's gotta be a lot lost regardless.

Goddamn, my wife and I honeymooned there.

Is this the main/tourist part of Lahaina? It’s been hard to understand how much damage has been done and where.

Yes unfortunately it looks like the entire town is gone

I’m from Maui, and most of my family lives on the island... the last several days have been really really hard. My home will never be the same, some of what burned down is absolutely irreplaceable, and the loss of life is truly awful

As a San Diegan, who has seen their fair share of fires in their lifetime, my heart goes out to everyone affected. It’s a terrible, terrifying thing to experience, that I wouldn’t wish on anyone. Especially, with no where to go.

I was just walking along Front Street a few weeks ago. It was so cool. This is devastating.

Was on Maui last August and of course spent time in Lahina. Walked all the marina docks. Surfed the break with my daughter. So many friendly shop owners and workers.

My thoughts go out to all the locals who've lost everything. It's just....unimaginable.

How could this have happened? Shouldn't all the building codes we have effectively prevent something like this???

Lahaia town is a historic town (as stated in the article), so i assume they did not yet have the same standards as they do today yet.

Lahaina was a old historic town, many of the buildings weren't updated to code. Especially on Front Street where most of the damage seems to be

Lots of historic buildings here but even if they were up to today's standards they wouldn't have had a chance. This fire was fueled by drought and 80mph winds. California has tons of new buildings that burn down with winds half that speed. It was just a crazy force moving through.

Do sea lions live in Hawaii?

Keep in mind Lahaina is laid out like a long thin strip between the ocean and a bypass road.

Wildfire came from the other side of the bypass and came towards the ocean. So likely hit the whole town all at once. Front street is the Main Street parallel to the ocean and cars would get stuck in a traffic jam easily.

Wouldn’t take long for the fire to cross the bypass and make it all the way to the ocean.