29 homes proposed for Haleiwa land
A Haleiwa landowner is seeking to rezone 7 acres of agricultural property for development of 29 homes on the edge of an existing residential neighborhood and large farms.
Scott C. Wallace recently filed a zoning change application with the city Department of Planning and Permitting for the proposed project called Haleiwa Plantation Village.
The project, which borders Achiu Lane near the middle of Haleiwa Town, has been in the works for at least four years.
Pacific Catalyst LLC, a consultant for Wallace that prepared the application, said in the filing that the subdivision is intended to provide housing for the local workforce and blend into the rural character of the existing community.
“The physical configuration of the project, balanced with the expansive open spaces around it, will maintain the rural context in which the future homes will be built,” the application said.
The development cost of Haleiwa Plantation Village is estimated at $2 million, which includes creating house lots of at least 5,000 square feet each and other infrastructure such as roads, a wastewater treatment system and a stormwater retention basin.
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Wallace intends to sell the lots and let buyers build their own homes. Lot prices were not projected.
Access to the property would be through an extension of Kilioe Place.
Pacific Catalyst noted in the application that the plan as infill housing is consistent with the North Shore Sustainable Communities Plan and received a “largely positive” response at a May 2012 North Shore Neighborhood Board meeting when the project called for 25 homes.
Some area residents, however, have expressed concerns about traffic, flooding and wastewater management. At a November neighborhood board meeting updating the project, a motion to support the project failed with a vote of 2-10 along with two abstentions.
Wallace is seeking to rezone two parcels from AG-2 general agriculture to R-5 residential, which will be subject to a City Council vote.
Pacific Catalyst said in the application that using the land for commercial farming hasn’t been viable because of problems that include an expensive water supply, soil that is sticky when wet and too hard when dry, relatively small acreage, proximity to adjacent homes and flooding during heavy rainstorms.
Lovan Farm has used the property for about 25 years and abandoned an attempt to grow wetland taro on the site because of a persistent and unmanageable apple snail infestation, the application said.
Lovan currently uses the property to store equipment in connection with a 100-acre farm it operates in Waialua. There is also a dwelling on the property.
The Planning Department is accepting public comments through Nov. 4. Email Mike Watkins at mwatkins@honolulu.gov or call 768-8044 with reference to project file number 2016/Z-7.
A copy of the zoning change application can be found at 808ne.ws/zoning change.
10 responses to “29 homes proposed for Haleiwa land”
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Wallace is seeking to rezone two parcels from AG-2 general agriculture to R-5 residential, which will be subject to a City Council vote.
WHY DO WE LET THIS TO HAPPEN ? ITs zoned AG and should ALWAYS stay AG LAND. STOP THIS B$
Simple answer, he makes more $ in R-5 than in AG-2……..
Because as the article suggests sometimes what is zoned ag is not suited for ag. In this case, it now is relegated to storage for farm equipment for ag land further down the road. We need more residential development. Local people need homes to live in. Why not redone property that is marginal for ag anyway, if the flooding issues can be resolved?
Your full of it those homes wont go to local people. Nobody owes anybody else a crackerbox. Like I have said many times before, wake up North Shore. Your up next as part of Caldwell’s cement the rest of the aina program.
People need homes. They won’t have them unless someone builds them. Unless you want half the population living on the street, start building homes and stop trying to preserve bare dirt and weeds that grows nothing.
Wet feet works when you are in the shower but not so much if your house is in a low lying area known to flood. An engineered set aside to accommodate storm-water and keep it on the property works great until it too is full. Engineering foundations for house support in abandoned taro patches with a shallow water table just might be a little tricky too. Not a good place to build.
Good points, leino. And where will the final effluent from the proposed wastewater treatment plant go? Injection wells are not very efficient in the middle of a flood plain.
Why would anyone want to build in an area that floods????…greed?
I would not consider R-5/5000 sqft lots being ‘rural’. they are usually able to build within 5′ of the property line, basically what you see in new developments in Kapolei. why not R-10? is there a larger size they could go to, like a ranch zoning or something?
Too bad, no can build houses for people – we keeping it “country”! Gotta go mainland…