73-6268 Alani Loop, #19, Kailua Kona, HI 96740
Price: $5,250,000
Provided By: Kohanaiki Realty LLC
73-4461 LEMI PL, #38, KAILUA KONA, HI 96740
Price: $4,995,000
Provided By: Kohanaiki Realty LLC
73-6268 Alani Loop, #19, Kailua Kona, HI 96740
Price: $4,995,000
Provided By: Kohanaiki Realty LLC
73-4806 HINAHINA RD, #12, KAILUA-KONA, HI 96740
Price: $4,395,000
Provided By: Kohanaiki Realty LLC
73-4861 MAIA LOOP, #LOT 11, KAILUA KONA, HI 96740
Price: $1,795,000
Provided By: Kohanaiki Realty LLC
ABOUT
Surrounded by lava flows and over 1.5 miles of uninterrupted white sand beachfront, Kohanaiki sits on 450 acres on the Kona Coast. This private community features world-class amenities including access to a unique private club experience with a 67,000 sq.ft. clubhouse completed in 2019. Members can take advantage of the tennis facility, 18-hole Rees Jones designed private golf course, full fitness center, even a community farm. Up to 400 residences are planned for the community, including 75 ocean and golf view custom home sites.
DID YOU KNOW?
The landscape of Hawai`i is filled with what we refer to as “canoe plants.” It’s likely you have one or more growing in your yard. Canoe plants are the plants that were originally brought to Hawai`i by ancient Polynesians. The Polynesians came here on sailing canoes, hence the name, "canoe plants". Although these introduced plants are not native to Hawai`i, they are an essential part of its culture. These 24 plants were essential for the survival and cultural development of the Hawaiians and include species like ʻulu (breadfruit), kalo (taro), kukui, ʻawa, kamani, niu (coconut), and more. The plants Polynesians stowed on their double-hulled canoes were carefully cultivated and painstakingly transported as the survival of the crew depended on it. Those onboard required food, cordage, medicine, fabric, containers, and all of life’s necessities once they made landfall. So, canoe plants represented the future sustenance of new societies. Just as the early Polynesian settlers became Native Hawaiians, these canoe plants became indigenized through a long history of fostering pilina (relationships) with the lands of Hawaiʻi. Today, Hawaiʻi State laws encourage the cultivation of canoe plants in landscaping: HRS 103D-408 [Act 233 (2015)], defines “Hawaiian plants” as “any endemic or indigenous plant species growing or living in Hawaiʻi without having been brought to Hawaiʻi by humans; OR any plant species, brought to Hawaiʻi by Polynesians before European contact.”
JANUARY 2025 STATS
Kohanaiki recorded no home sales from October, 2024 through January, 2025. There was one home sale during the month of September. The residence spent 19 days on the market and sold for 90.50% of the Sale/Current Price or $10.5M. The land/building price per square foot was $3,675.
Kohanaiki recorded one condo sale in the month of January for $4,664,063,
Or 94.20% of the Sale/Current Price. The condo was on the market for 7 days and the price per square foot was $2,120.
2024 YEAR END MARKET STATS
Sales on 11 Kohanaiki homes closed in 2024, with prices ranging from $4.95M to $14.5M. The homes averaged a 100.18% Sale/Current Price or $9,071,543.73 and were on the market for an average of 9 days. The price per square foot, land/building, averaged out at $3,069.
Nineteen residences classified as condominiums closed at Kohanaiki in 2024. Sale prices ranged from $4.2M to $6.4M with the Sale/Current price averaging 98.49% or $4,904,473.69. The homes spent an average of 13 days on the market with a price per square foot of $1,898.
REAL ESTATE TIP
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Living With Purpose
It’s that time of year again and for those of you who have been following my blog and articles, both when I wrote for the newspaper and now online,...
EVENTS
Celebrate Hawaiian plants and their uses for sustainability at the 14th Annual Grow Hawaiian Festival at the Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden on February 22. The festival includes demonstrations, displays, hands-on activities, garden tours, plant sales, music, food, and information tables. Hawaiian artists and cultural practitioners, conservation professionals, botanists, and students of Hawaiian native plants and ethnobotany will be on hand. The festival runs from 9am-2:30pm. at the garden (82-6160 Mamalahoa Hwy.), which is located across the street from Manago Hotel in Captain Cook. Parking is available.
Location
Kohanaiki Resort
Video Tips
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Statistics provided courtesy of Hawai'i Information Service.