North Shore Community Meeting August 29th, 2024

On Thursday, August 29th, our team hosted a community open house at Kahuku High School and Intermediate cafeteria. Over 150 community members were in attendance. A special mahalo to Kahuku High School for the space, Country Beach Bus for providing the dinner, Henry Fong for sharing his beautiful ‘ilima plants with the community, music by Stanley Albrecht, and a beautiful pule and ‘oli by Kela Miller and Cy Bridges.
The evening provided an opportunity to share and listen. After a presentation, guests were invited to meet the team positioned at various information booths around the room. Several of the stations were interactive in nature allowing the community a chance to share their vision for the future, identify community needs, and priorities for responsible development.
About 20% of the meeting’s attendees participated and expressed that the protection of education and native wildlife was the most meaningful aspect of the project. Out of 12 choices, public access, traffic mitigation, and local housing rose to the top 3 most pressing community needs.
Comments cards, a link to a short survey, and a career opportunity form were also available for attendees to drop their questions, share their mana‘o, and express their interest in learning more. A total of 51 comment cards, 7 surveys, and 5 career interest forms were completed.
To learn more and view the hand-out that was shared at the community meeting click here. To fill out the online survey to share your feedback, please click here.


Interactive stations and visuals allowed the community to learn about the site plan from the Areté Collective team
Recent News
Areté Collective begins construction on Turtle Bay development following delays
Areté Collective purchased 65 acres on Oahu’s North Shore for $43 million last year from Blackstone, planning a high-end development next to The Ritz-Carlton Oahu, Turtle Bay resort. The project will eventually include 100 resort residential units and up to 250 hotel units in coming years.
Expanding Access to Turtle Bay’s Trails and Shoreline
Since the landmark 2015 agreement that preserved more than 75% of the 1,300-acre Turtle Bay property as open space in perpetuity, Areté Collective has continued to fulfill its commitment to responsible development by improving trail and shoreline access, expanding amenities and maintaining access amid ongoing construction.
Development Update August 2025
A temporary dust fence is being installed along Kaihalulu East Drive for 18–24 months to protect the environment and the construction area. Irrigation mainline realignment between holes 10 & 18 on the Fazio golf course continues with completion by the end of August. Mauka Basin work begins. Foundational work on RR3 phase 1 continues. Public access to hiking and biking trails will remain open throughout construction, with temporary access available via the Kahuku Trail