The area was the focus of decades of political and legal efforts to preserve sensitive habitat that includes 5 miles of coastline.

Construction of new residential units on Oahu鈥檚 North Shore is scheduled to begin in October after two Utah-based development companies purchased 65 acres from the owners of the Turtle Bay Resort.

Arete Collective and the Wasatch Group plan to build up to 350 units on permitted land east of the resort complex.

It鈥檚 the first new construction since a conservation agreement was signed in 2015 preserving 625 acres of open space between Kawela Bay and Kahuku Point while still allowing for some development.  

Community and environmental groups have historically pushed back on attempts to develop the environmentally sensitive area. Added traffic congestion was a major concern for North Shore residents when the resort previously wanted to expand but developers say that’s not an issue anymore.

Commitments to natural preservation have been repeated over the years, the North Shore Community Land Trust鈥檚 executive director Adam Borrello said, and now 鈥渢he community will be watching everything very closely.鈥

Aret茅 Collective, the architectural Design group that is developing a 65 acre parcel of land just above Turtle Bay on the North Shore of Oahu has already started to remove invasive species from the area just purchased and is promising to keep their development with considerable setbacks to protect the ocean environment. Photographed June 28th, 2024 (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Arete Collective and the Wasatch Group are developing land east of the Turtle Bay Resort. The first phase of the project will consist of 20 units in four buildings a 33-acre block left of the frame. They are scheduled for completion by 2027.
(David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

The new building will be done sustainably and with an eye to the area鈥檚 unique qualities, co-developer and CEO of Arete Collective Rebecca Buchan said.

鈥淲e’ve tried to convince people that you鈥檇 much rather have us doing this because we actually care about what you have to say, we care about the land and we care more about the North Shore than a big corporate development company,鈥 she said.

Protections, But Development As Well

Any development on the site must comply with laid out in two documents.

The first is a unilateral land use agreement between the county and the resort from 1986. The second is a 2015 conservation easement the state and county signed with Turtle Bay鈥檚 then-owner Replay Resort to preserve 625 acres of resort land in exchange for $45 million. 

The protected areas include biodiverse habitats, wetlands, an extensive public trail system and two public parks. Two golf courses are included under the agreement to prevent development there in the future. All these features will be managed by the new owners.

Map showing the zoning for the area between the Turtle Bay Resort and Marconi Point.
The black outline shows the 65-acre land parcels east of the Turtle Bay Resort purchased by Arete Collective and the Wasatch Group in April 2024. They have plans to build up to 350 units in two of the permitted areas between Kawela Bay and Kahuku Point. The green areas show the main areas preserved. (City and County of Honolulu/Civil Beat/2024)

The 2015 agreement came after between various resort owners and environmental groups. Hailed as a win for the community, the easement still left the door open for some development. The resort was then floating plans for more than 600 units in two additional hotels and 100 homes.

The current plan permits 350 units on two parcels sold to the developers. 

Arete and Wasatch have a running start because Arete began working with Blackstone in 2021 as the master planner for the next phase of residential development on the permitted parcels. But Blackstone didn鈥檛 proceed and sold 65 acres to Arete and Wasatch for $43 million in April and the resort to Maryland-based Host Hotels & Resorts in May for $725 million

The resort deal includes another 49 acres that could still be developed by the new owner.

Buchan said Arete and Wasatch had been consulting with community groups about their development plan before the land sale, including with the Koolauloa Neighborhood Board. Calls and emails to board members were not returned. A spokesperson for the Kahuku Village Association said they had not yet had any contact.

While previous owners of Turtle Bay have been 鈥渋n-it to flip-it,鈥 Buchan said Arete and Wasatch were committed long-term. And the resort鈥檚 new owner Host, which will operate the resort under the Ritz-Carlton flag, 鈥渟eems to be very sensitive to all the things we鈥檝e been discussing with the community,鈥 she said. 

Rebecca Buchan is the CEO and Co-Founder of Aret茅 Collective, the architectural Design group that is developing a 65 acre parcel of land just above Turtle Bay on the North Shore of Oahu. Photographed June 28th, 2024 (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Landscape architect Kris Kvarfordt, left, and CEO and co-founder of Arete Collective Rebecca Buchan said the new developments east of the Turtle Bay Resort are being built with coastal setbacks of between 150 feet to 300 feet and with fire retardant materials. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

Work has begun on a 33-acre block zoned resort residential that will eventually include 20 buildings with five units in each. Water and vehicular access is being put in this month, Buchan said. Building should start in October and they expect to hand over keys to the first 20 units in four buildings by 2027. 

All the buildings will comply with the existing height limit of 90 feet, with some additions planned to reach 65 feet, although it is unclear which.

During a site visit last week, crews were grading and removing vegetation and non-native trees like ironwood. That clearing created concern among locals, the company鈥檚 landscape architect Kris Kvarfordt said, but removing invasive species was part of the forestry management plan. 

鈥淭he trees have been the hardest and that’s probably what we’ve spent the most time talking about to people walking along the trails,鈥 Buchan said.

The new buildings will be set back 150 feet to 350 feet above the high water line. As of July 1, shoreline setbacks on Oahu are required to be between 60 feet to 130 feet from the certified shoreline.

鈥淲e鈥檝e tried to retreat from the ocean as far as we possibly can,鈥 she said.  

Kvarfordt said the setbacks are the most significant environmental decision of the project and represented at least a 40-year plan for the new homes. Those measures are also likely to appeal to their buyers.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to be people who want to have these homes for a long time,鈥 he said. 

Owners will not be able to use the units for short-term rentals under the housing association rules.

Aret茅 Collective, the architectural Design group that is developing a 65 acre parcel of land just above Turtle Bay on the North Shore of Oahu has already started to remove invasive species from the area just purchased and is promising to keep their development with considerable setbacks to protect the ocean environment. Photographed June 28th, 2024 (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
There will eventually be 20 buildings with five units each on a 33-acre lot to the right of the public pathway between Kawela Bay and Kahuku Point. Water and vehicular access work began on the site in July and construction is planned to start in October. The developers have been removing invasive trees like ironwood as required by the forestry management plan. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

The new residences would be connected to the resort鈥檚 wastewater management system, and will use residential solar installed by Wasatch’s renewable energy division.

With the Maui wildfires in mind, the project will use fire-retardant building materials and power lines will be put underground where possible, Buchan said. A consultant believes they can reduce water consumption on the golf courses by 50% through a redesign. 

Any residential expansion in the area will add to the North Shore鈥檚 notorious traffic woes, the most recent found. But the two-lane Kamehameha Highway would be able to accommodate the increase with some improvements, the consultant said. Air quality would also be compromised, another study found. That assessment was based on the potential development of 3,500 new units at Turtle Bay.

The 1986 unilateral agreement with the county required the resort to construct three additional intersections before any development begins.

But a 2022 review by an engineer from the state Department of Transportation found that the reduced construction density of the project meant road improvements, including a refuge lane on Kamehameha Highway, wouldn’t be required until 98 units had been constructed. On the current timetable that is likely another five years out, according to Arete.

The developers say they anticipate making other improvements not required under the agreement before then, including linking Kaihalulu East with the main entrance to the resort, Kuilima Drive.

Traffic impact remains a major concern for locals, said Alan Poh of the , and the group wants to meet with the developers before the new construction begins.

Mark Garrity, executive director of the Oahu Metropolitan Planning Organization, said the agency is not currently looking at traffic volumes around the resort area.

Fragile Coastal Habitat

The scale of the proposed development is within the guidelines of the for the site from 2013, but the potential for environmental disruption still exists.

Right next to the proposed area is the fragile coastal dune environment on Kahuku Point 鈥 Kalaeokauna驶oa 鈥 which is the subject of a restoration effort by the . The sandy strip is a habitat for albatross, sea turtles and monk seals, among other species.

The trust played an important role in establishing the conservation easements on both the makai and mauka parcels at Turtle Bay, and while they haven’t seen all the details, Borrello said the new owners appear to be “attempting to be responsive to the needs of the community” in the first phase of development.

Borrello said Arete and Wasatch seem genuinely interested in the environmental stewardship the land trust is doing with the community, “so we’ll make sure we’re involved in all the conversations so that all the promises and obligations in the relevant documents are lived up to.”

The Kahuku Point dune environment near the planned development area is being restored under the stewardship of the North Shore Community Land Trust. The Arete Collective team and Buchan family members participated in a work day organized by the trust. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

Arete and Wasatch take ownership at a time when the state Department of Land and Natural Resources is seeking $3 million in fines from an owner of land on nearby Marconi Point over the destruction of native bee habitat and the death of a nesting albatross, among other infringements. 

Buchan said she was aware of the issues there and was hopeful her company鈥檚 presence could be a positive influence on their neighbors. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a lot of opportunity for us to help bring back the ecology of the dune system,鈥 she said, including coastal habitat in front of the site they are starting to build on.

Kvarfordt said they planned to use the expertise of groups like the land trust to educate their own workforce and staff on environmental issues, and also actively engage new owners with restoration projects in the future.

Matt Weyer, the Honolulu City Council member for the district, said he had been on several Zoom meetings with Buchan and her team and was grateful they were engaging in community outreach. Weyer said his main contact with the developers had been to remind them of the legal obligations under the conservation easement and the unilateral agreement.

Once Host Hotels & Resorts formally assumes ownership of the resort, Weyer said there may be room for modifying some aspects of the 1986 unilateral agreement like the road improvement requirements. Borello from the land trust agrees.

The Kahuku Point development is on the smaller side of , which includes a 2,200-acre development with 3,500 homes outside Austin, but definitely their most boutique. Arete and Wasatch already have a presence on Oahu through their involvement in the Laulima affordable housing development in Kapolei.

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