(BIVN) – A draft environmental assessment and anticipated finding of no significant impact has been published for a family agricultural community proposed in the Waikoloa.



Nakahili, a Work Force Developers, LLC project, will be on approximately 1,559 acres near the intersection of Mamalahoa Highway with Waikoloa Road. When fully built out, Nakahili will include approximately 1,158 apartments and farm dwellings, the developer says.

According to the document, Nakahili will include farm dwellings on agricultural lots, allow for agricultural operations, and include a small neighborhood commercial “village” area with apartments, limited retail and light industrial uses, and a small wastewater treatment facility.



Two parks are also proposed. One will be a community green for community activities and events adjacent to the village area, and the other will be a large regional park, the document states.



“Community infrastructure will be provided on-site, including water wells, water tanks, a waste wastewater treatment facility to serve the village area, and several detention basins,” the EA states. “Approvals for Nakahili are proposed to be processed under Chapter 201H, Hawai‘i Revised Statues (HRS), meaning that a majority of the dwelling units (50% of the units, plus one additional unit) must be affordable to households with incomes at or below 140% of the area median income.”



Agriculture will be a big part of the proposed community, according to the document:

Nakahili is designed with approximately 700 one-acre agricultural lots surrounded by approximately 150 larger agricultural lots ranging from two to five areas (and slightly larger) located around the perimeter of Nakahili to serve as a buffer to the adjacent, larger agricultural properties. The design also provides for a 150-foot wide firebreak around the entire Nakahili perimeter created from including “no build” open space easements on the large perimeter agricultural lots.

The developers say that at some point in the future, the regional park within Nakahili could eventually connect to an even larger regional park area (for a total of up to approximately 150 acres) on adjacent property to the west owned by the Waikoloa Village Association.

The document talks about the need for the project on Hawaiʻi Island, and Nakahili “could be an important component of a County plan to meet an anticipated future demand for some 28,400 resident-oriented housing units by 2035.” The EA states: