Desirable Lalea 3-bedroom 2.5-bath residence with views of Koko Head and a spacious fenced lanai with slate flooring. This split level town home feels like a single family with a 1-car enclosed garage and second open stall. Features granite counter tops, hardwood cabinets, newer stainless steel appliances, bamboo laminate and ceramic tile flooring. The many windows provide good cross-ventilation and ample natural light. Relax on your lanai or in the pool and club house close by. Within the common area is a large grassy lawn with BBQ grills, gazebo and picnic style seating. Guest parking stalls are available. Conveniently located close to Costco, Safeway, Longs, and various shops and restaurants. A pet friendly community.
Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
2/1
Living Sqft
1,075
Floors
2
Parking
2
BBQ
Club House
Pool
Recreation Area
Resident Manager
Auto Garage Door Opener
Cable TV
Ceiling Fan
Chandelier
Dishwasher
Disposal
Drapes
Other
Range Hood
Refrigerator
Smoke Detector
Washer
Hawaii Kai
Hawaiʻi Kai is a largely residential area located in the City & County of Honolulu, in the East Honolulu CDP on the island of Oʻahu. Hawaiʻi Kai is the largest of several communities at the eastern end of the island. The area was largely developed by Henry J. Kaiser around the ancient Maunalua fishpond and wetlands area known as Kuapā (meaning “fishpond wall”). The Hawaiʻi Kai or Koko Marina was dredged from Kuapā Pond starting around 1959. Dredging not only transformed the shallow coastal inlet and wetlands into a marine embayment, but was accompanied by considerable filling and clearing of the pond margins. In 1961, Kaiser-Aetna entered into a lease agreement with the land owner, the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estate, to develop the 521 acre (2.11 km²) fishpond into residential tracts with a marina and channels separated by fingers of land and islands upon which house lots and commercial properties would be laid out and developed (ACOE, 1975). Nearly all of the low-lying lands surrounding the marina have since been developed, and neighborhoods now extend back into the several valleys and up the separating ridges.