

http://www.oahureale.com/201400772-41-5 ... -Waimanalo
~RG
Moderator: Styles Bitchley
Hi RG...I check it everyday in hopes than we will see the interior photos...and Welcome to the forum.Rembrandt's Girl wrote:OK, I gotta' know...am I the only one who checks Pahonu's listing on a daily basis (ok, sometimes a few times a day) to see if the Listing Status is still "Active"? Every time I do my heart starts beating a little bit faster!
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http://www.oahureale.com/201400772-41-5 ... -Waimanalo
~RG
Welcome aboard legto!legto wrote:If I'm repeating what others have said forgive me, I'm new to this forum and there are 90+ pages to this thread.
I agree that a problem is location. It's a beautiful property but Waimanalo, particularly the eastern end of it is a dumpy area with greasy diners and rundown shacks on the other side of the highway. Another issue is beach or lack of same, there is in effect no beach in recent years which is a must for many (but not all) ocean front buyers and the days of adding your own sand or pumping sand as a private owner are long gone! Since you are away from desirable neighborhoods (It's a long drive to Kahala or Waikiki for shopping and dinning of the non Styrofoam variety) you might as well move to another island and get way more for way less.
By the time the house and property is redone or replaced to expected standards of an 8 figure property you would be way into mid 20's minimum (for only 20 times that you could have bought the whole island of Lanai, imagine the subdivision possibilities there!!). There are piles of buyers in the low millions but when you get to ten times that the pool becomes super shallow and very fussy. Hard to imagine someone pouring $20+ large into that area with no beach.
As for redeveloping; say you chopped it up into seven 60-75 foot wide lots you'd have to fetch $2M+ a pop for land just to break even, doesn't look like local land values support that (When talking land values on ocean front you must remember that the deeper the lot the lower the per foot value for obvious reasons). So just to hope to make money you'd need $4M a copy with a modest (relative term) home included. Just the taxes and interest cost for the 2-4 years you'd need to get permitted, demo, build and sell would cost a few million. Lastly hitting the small local market with several listings at once would hurt and slow transactions.
I think the price will have to drop substantially. Based quickly on the other listings I saw in this thread I think the Zillow number is about right. At that price I could see it work several ways including a hybrid where someone buys the whole thing to keep the area around the house (eastern half) and subdivide say 3 lots on the west and still be left with a generous wide frontage property with either a renovated historical house with a Hollywood history or a big ugly McMansion for a cost that makes sense.
Just my 2 cents!
Hi legto,legto wrote:Just watched the video; looks like the place was left to pot in 1988. Actually even in the Magnum era the place had already slipped.... Watch a early H5O from say 68-70 that featured the property and compare it to how it looked in the 80's.
Maintiaining such a large property in a tropical environment and a maritime environment is not to be underestimated. Everything grows like weeds in Hawaii and the moist salt air eats up steel, aluminum and concrete as well as rotting wood. This is especially a problem on the windward side of an island. When a property like that is let go it gets away from you fast. Forgetting the buildings just redoing sea walls, fencing and cleaning out and replanting the landscaping will eat up a million in a hurry. Just a sea wall like that is a thousand a foot. (learned that the hard way with a beach house in Maine)
I smell a tear down in the future. How old is the owner?
Happy to!Doc Ibold wrote:Nice work! Please share if you have more!