In 1995, the State approved a 541 acre urban development for Lihue.
In 1995, the State approved a 541 acre urban development for Lihue. The petitioner was Amfac/JMB Hawaii. JMB Hawaii was a real estate company from Chicago that had recently purchased some of Amfac’s land after the sugarcane plantations shut down. JMB Hawaii was the financial backer of this project. The Land Use Commission’s (LUC) Finding of Facts state: “approvals for development will be in place to allow for major infrastructure development to begin in late 1996”. JMB Hawaii sold their holdings in 2001 with no approvals having been secured. In 2001, JMB Hawaii was sold to Visionary, LLC. In 2000, Grove Farm also changed hands to related party, Visionary, LLC. In Visionary, LLC’s submittal to LUC it states “It should be noted that both Visionary, LLC (dba Lihue Land Company) and Grove Farm Company share common officers, directors, and staff.” These two entities control a large percentage of development rights in Lihue.
The project includes:
- 1,250 Single Family units
- 550 Multi-Family units
- 70 acres of Commercial use
- 128 acres of Industrial use
- 70 acres of Public use
- 48 acres of Parks
The estimate to bring water and sewage to the project was $35 million. Allocating that cost to just the 1,800 residential units, leaving out commercial and industrial use, would be less than $20,000 per unit. There was plenty of water. Lihue’s “total withdrawal of ground water from the aquifer system, including the water requirements of the Project, would therefore be… 17% of the sustainable yield.” An economic and fiscal impact study prepared by Arthur Anderson and Company said “about 4,475 residents are projected to reside within the Property by 2016.”