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CheapTickets.com founders buy oceanfront Kahala estate for $11M cash

March 9, 2016 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

A Hawaii couple who founded CheapTickets.com have purchased a beachfront estate in Honolulu’s posh Kahala neighborhood for $11.5 million in cash, one of the highest recorded sales of a single-family home on Oahu so far this year, according to public records.

Designed by Hawaii architect John Hara in 2002, the 5,838-square-foot five-bedroom, six-bathroom home sits on a nearly 0.8-acre parcel at 4711 Kahala Ave.

It was previously owned by Karl Essig, a former Morgan Stanley executive, and Megumi Essig.

Michael and Sandra Hartley, who both founded CheapTickets.com in Honolulu in 1986, are the new owners of the property, which includes a chef’s kitchen and guest apartment.

The estate, which was on the market for just 79 days, has a total assessed value of about $9.7 million.

The Essigs purchased the property for $4.5 million in 1999.

CheapTickets.com is now owned by Orbitz Worldwide Inc. The travel discounter closed its Honolulu call center in 2003, leaving about 200 people without a job.

The Hartleys founded the company at a kiosk location in Honolulu and built it into one of the nation’s larger travel discounters, with five call centers across the country. More than 400 people worked for the company in Honolulu by 2000.

In 2001, Cendant Corp., a conglomerate that already had its own travel discount service, acquired Cheap Tickets Inc. for $280 million. Then in 2006, it was included in a sale to Orbitz.

Duane Shimogawa
Reporter
Pacific Business News

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A&B developing six luxury homes on former Kawamoto Kahala home lot, priced up to $12M

January 18, 2016 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

kahala_luxury

A rendering of the luxury homes project in Kahala being developed by A&B

The six luxury oceanfront homes being planned by Alexander & Baldwin Inc.’s real estate subsidiary has disclosed to PBN a price range for the six luxury apartment homes it developing on the Kahala property formerly owned by Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto. Each is being priced between $6 million and $12 million, a spokeswoman for the Honolulu-based company confirmed to PBN Wednesday.

Specific prices for each of the six stacked residential units being designed have not been set but will fall somewhere in that range.

A&B Properties Inc. plans to spend up to $45 million to develop the complex on the 1.3-acre vacant parcel at 4607 Kahala Ave., as first reported by PBN.

The three two-story buildings, which will include garage porte cocheres, guest parking and a pool, will abide by the 25-feet height limit for the neighborhood.

A&B said planning and permitting for the project is anticipated to be completed in 2017 with construction following and an anticipated completion in 2019.

The company acquired about 30 of Kawamoto’s Kahala properties for close to $100 million in 2013, and has sold most of the properties.

Duane Shimogawa
Reporter
Pacific Business News

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Zippy’s co-founder’s former Kahala Avenue Honolulu estate sold for $3M

November 9, 2015 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

A Kahala Avenue estate that had some well-known owners throughout the years, including the co-founder of Zippy’s Inc. and Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto, has been sold to an Arizona couple, according to public records.

The couple purchased the home from a subsidiary of Alexander & Baldwin Inc. (NYSE: ALEX) for about $3.1 million.

Located at 4398 Kahala Ave., the 3,144-square-foot five-bedroom, 4.5-bathroom estate was one of the homes purchased by A&B Properties Inc. in 2013 from Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto.

Kawamoto, who bought the home in 2005 from Giorgio Caldarone, an executive with Kamehameha Schools, and Nella Caldarone, for about $2.9 million, became an unpopular neighbor in the posh Honolulu neighborhood after allowing some of his properties to deteriorate.

The home’s former owners include the late Francis Higa, co-founder of Zippy’s, who purchased the home in 1989 for $1.6 million.

Last month, A&B Properties told PBN that it is demolishing an existing home on another Kahala Avenue home that was formerly owned by Kawamoto. A&B said it is removing the existing structure for health and safety reasons, and that it has no plans for the parcel.

A&B Properties recently transferred the ownership of another one of its Kahala Avenue properties it purchased from Kawamoto.

The company said it is exploring potential residential construction on the little more than one-acre oceanfront vacant parcel at 4607 Kahala Ave.

Duane Shimogawa
Reporter
Pacific Business News

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Alexander & Baldwin sells half of former Kawamoto-owned Kahala properties

April 21, 2015 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

This home in Honolulu’s Kahala neighborhood is one of the properties formerly owned by Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto before it was rehabilitated and marketed by Alexander & Baldwin.

This home in Honolulu’s Kahala neighborhood is one of the properties formerly owned by Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto before it was rehabilitated and marketed by Alexander & Baldwin.

Alexander & Baldwin Inc. has sold about half of the Kahala properties it acquired from Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto in 2013, the Honolulu-based real estate firm said in its 2014 annual report released Monday.

A&B had purchased the 30 “Estates of Kahala” properties for about $128 million.The sales as of Dec. 31, 2014, had generated a total of $82.5 million, the company reported.

The properties were in various stages of disrepair, and A&B began immediately to prepare them for sale.

In 2014 alone, A&B generated $38.4 million in sales from the properties, with 14 remaining on the market, including six large oceanfront parcels.

A Hawaii real estate expert previously told PBN that the properties could fetch at least $200 million.

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

 

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Kuhio Avenue landowners request zoning change

April 13, 2015 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

The beachfront property once owned by Hawaii philanthropist Cecily Johnston has been sold for $19.4 million to a Singapore-based developer.

The beachfront property once owned by Hawaii philanthropist Cecily Johnston has been sold for $19.4 million to a Singapore-based developer.

Far East Organization, one of the largest private property developers in Singapore, paid $19.4 million for Kahala beachfront property that once hosted presidents and heads of state, according to public records.

PBN reported on the sale in November 2014, although it wasn’t known at that time who the buyer was.

Singapore-based Boo Han Holdings Pte. Ltd., an investment holding and property development firm and a subsidiary of Far East Organization, bought the properties at 4653 and 4653-B Kahala Ave. fromAlexander & Baldwin Inc., which in 2013 bought them from Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto as part of a larger acquisition.

Kawamoto demolished the residence and allowed the property to deteriorate.

It had once been the home of Hawaii philanthropist Cecily Johnston, co-founder of Pacific Construction Co., who hosted such famous guests as President Ronald Reagan and former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

In September 2013, A&B paid $98 million for 27 properties that Kawamoto owned and about three months later bought three more properties, including the two that Johnston had owned, for another $30 million.

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

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Beachfront Kahala mansion sold, to be demolished

March 10, 2015 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

A beachfront mansion on Honolulu’s Kahala Avenue once owned by the late Honolulu attorney David Schutter has been sold to a new owner, who plans to demolish the existing 18,000 square-foot home and rebuild, PBN has confirmed.

Oahu Auctions also will hold an estate auction on Feb. 28 to liquidate the contents of the 17-bedroom home.

Carl Smigielski, owner and president of Sandwich Isles Realty, which recently merged with Keller Williams Realty’s Honolulu franchise, told PBN that the property at 4747 Kahala Ave. probably sold for between $17 million and $18 million.The seller was Japan-based Kirin Planning Ltd. Co.,

The property had been listed for $26 million and has a total assessed value of about $23.4 million, according to public records.

“It’s been on the market for five years,” Smigielski said, noting that the property has seen better days, and that a new residential project makes sense.

Mike Gobran, owner of MBC Construction LLC, who will have a hands-on role in the future development of the estate for the new owner, declined to say who the new owner is, although he said that the owner will demolish the estate, with the new plan for the property under the design process.

Schutter transferred the property to Bank of Hawaii in 1995, which was purchased by Kirin Planning two years later for $7.2 million, tax records show.

Oahu Auctions also held an auction for another Kahala Avenue property in 2013 — a former home of Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto that was purchased by Alexander & Baldwin Inc.

Duane Shimogawa Reporter – Pacific Business News

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Kahala beachfront property that once hosted presidents and heads of state sells for $19.4M

November 20, 2014 By Mark G. Howard Leave a Comment

A Kahala beachfront property that once hosted presidents and heads of state, before falling into disrepair, has been sold to an unidentified buyer for $19.4 million.

Alexander & Baldwin had bought the property at 4653 and 4653B Kahala Avenue from Japanese businessman Genshiro Kawamoto, who demolished the residence and allowed the property to deteriorate. It had once been the home of Hawaii philanthropist Cecily Johnston, co-founder of Pacific Construction Co., who hosted celebrities, presidents and heads of states there.

“This has always been a very prestigious property,” said Perry, who declined to disclose information about the buyer.

She said she did not know the buyer’s plans for the property.

One of the parcels is 26,400 square feet and the other is 36,894 square feet, Perry said.

In September 2013, Alexander & Baldwin paid $98 million for 27 properties that Kawamoto owned. In December of that same year, A&B bought three more properties, including the two that Johnston had owned, for another $30 million.

Perry said the sale represents a milestone in the renaissance of Kahala Avenue.

Coldwell Banker said the sale is the highest-priced land sale on Oahu since 2006.

Bill Cresenzo Reporter – Pacific Business News

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The Worst Neighbor on the Block: Genshiro Kawamoto

February 8, 2014 By idx guys 1 Comment

The eccentric billionaire ends his dramatic reign over Kahala Avenue.

You never know who the angels are going to be until they appear,” says Kahala Avenue homeowner Richard Turbin, who feels as if benevolent spirits have delivered his neighborhood from the blight-filled reign of Genshiro Kawamoto, eccentric Japanese real-estate tycoon and Kahala’s Worst Neighbor Ever.

One of the 27 Kahala Avenue properties that Kawamoto sold to Alexander & Baldwin. PHOTOS: JONATHAN MORSE

One of the 27 Kahala Avenue properties that Kawamoto sold to Alexander & Baldwin.
PHOTOS: JONATHAN MORSE

For Turbin and other homeowners along this celebrated avenue—one of Honolulu’s most prestigious residential streets—the angels appeared in the form of local real estate firm Alexander & Baldwin and the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office.

The prosecutors hobbled Kawamoto last March when they locked him in jail for a month and brought him up on charges of tax evasion. They also had Kawamoto’s passport revoked, ensuring he won’t be back in Honolulu anytime soon. Alexander & Baldwin made a deal with Kawamoto, out on bail, to buy most of his Hawaii holdings. Altogether that was 31 properties, including 27 along Kahala Avenue—or 16 percent of all the parcels along the 1.8-mile street.

“He’s done his damage, and it will probably take five or 10 years for all of his properties to get sold to responsible owners,” says Turbin, who celebrated Kawamoto’s buy-out by popping open a bottle of champagne with his neighbors and buying stock in Alexander & Baldwin. “It’s finally over.”

Kawamoto hasn’t pulled out of Kahala entirely. He held onto three adjoining lots on the makai side of the street, where he has knocked down walls and mansions to make space for his sprawling collection of statuary. (The gaudy statues and miniature pagodas on some of Kawamoto’s other properties were the first things Alexander & Baldwin removed upon buying the properties.) Still, Kawamoto’s grip on the neighborhood has been broken. The big question remains: What was that all about?

Kawamoto wasn’t simply a bad neighbor. He was a bad neighbor on a colossal scale. He bought up every property along the beautiful street he could get his hands on—sometimes paying well more than market rate—and then he let most of them go to ruin. Some he let go through simple neglect. Others he helped on their way with sledgehammers and heavy equipment. He knocked down walls and left piles of rubble and twisted rebar. He filled swimming pools with big rocks, and let lawns die, weeds grow and thickets of brush go wild.

Some houses, he razed entirely, including a dozen perfectly good beachfront mansions. The derelict properties attracted vandals, who broke windows and left graffiti. Squatters set up camp on some of the lots, making pallet fires and hanging their laundry out to dry. Rats grew in number and boldness. Feral chickens crowed at dawn.

Kawamoto teared up in 2007 on the day he put three low-income native hawaiian families in his Kahala homes.

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In a move that caught the attention of the world’s press, Kawamoto selected three large homeless or nearly homeless Hawaiian families and put them in houses rent free in 2007. He called the project his Kahala Avenue Mission.

Some theorize that Kawamoto was trying to drive down real estate prices so that he could snap up even more property. But if that were indeed the case, it didn’t work out very well. Kawamoto paid around $170 million for the properties that he sold to Alexander & Baldwin for $98 million.

Turbin believes Kawamoto relished tweaking his neighbors and showing off his power, both to the people of Hawaii and his countrymen. Turbin notes that thousands of visitors from Japan pass by Kawamoto’s Kahala Avenue properties every year. Every visitor attending the Sony Open, staying at the Kahala Hotel or running in the Honolulu Marathon (16,000 entrants from Japan in 2012) would see Kawamoto’s properties.

“Kahala Avenue is an important place for the Japanese from Japan, as well as local people,” says Turbin. “And I think he’s telling his countrymen in Japan, ‘Look at me—Kawamoto. I am so powerful, I can wreck this avenue that means a lot to you.’”

Kawamoto’s tenure along Kahala Avenue was only the latest chapter in his long, strange history of real estate investing in Hawaii. He first appeared on the scene a quarter of a century ago, during the go-go days of the 1980s housing bubble, when Japanese investors on real-estate-buying sprees drove prices in Oahu’s depressed housing market through the roof.

During the last four months of 1987, Kawamoto quietly bought 78 homes and apartments in Honolulu, including many in the Portlock and Hawaii Kai neighborhoods.

Stories were told of Kawamoto cruising Oahu in the back of a limousine, pointing out houses that caught his eye, then dispatching agents to knock on doors and make cash offers. It didn’t matter whether the places were for sale or not. By the end of 1988, he owned more than 170 properties.

He made all the purchases in cash, often above market price with what he called “pocket money.” He was dubbed “a one-man inflation spiral.”

Unlike other Japanese investors at the time, who generally kept low profiles, Kawamoto seemed to relish the spotlight. He called press conferences frequently, and quickly became the most public face of the real estate bubble, which squeezed many local people out of the market entirely. Kawamoto insisted he was no speculator, though. He said he only wanted to help with the housing situation, but he seemed to be more talk than action.

Political backlash ensued, including a very public war of words with then-Mayor Frank Fasi, who had proposed banning foreign buyers from investing in residential real estate. Kawamoto said he wanted to build affordable housing on Oahu, but insisted on first meeting with the mayor to see if he had his support. The mayor insisted that Kawamoto go through the housing department, like any other developer.

The two swapped insults in the news media. Fasi called Kawamoto a “jackass” and said “I think he’s all mouth.” Kawamoto said the mayor acted like a “lunatic.” Everyone looked bad.

By his own accounting, Kawamoto was always an odd duck. In a 1989 interview with The Honolulu Advertiser, he said, through an interpreter, that his parents had six children, and “out of the bunch just one strange child.” Him. Among his early eccentricities, he explained, he used far more towels to dry himself after bathing than anyone else, and he demanded that his mother arrange his food on his plate until it suited his aesthetic sensibilities.

Like Donald Trump, America’s homegrown odd-duck real estate mogul, Kawamoto was the scion of a successful real estate investor. Kawamoto’s father made a fortune buying up tracts of bombed-out Tokyo land after World War II. He also ran a kimono company, which Kawamoto took over at a young age, though he was far more interested in building upon the family’s real estate holdings. He eventually came to own about 60 buildings in Tokyo’s business and entertainment districts, many occupied by nightclubs, hostess bars and pachinko parlors. Kawamoto became known as “landlord of nightspots.” When property values skyrocketed during Japan’s bubble period, Kawamoto, who has never married, became one of the wealthiest men in Japan.

Kawamoto teared up in 2007 on the day he put three low-income native hawaiian families in his Kahala homes.

Kawamoto teared up in 2007 on the day he put three low-income native hawaiian families in his Kahala homes.

In Hawaii, Kawamoto insisted that he wasn’t a speculator, and tried hard to paint himself as a philanthropist, who wasn’t concerned about making money off his local investments. He said he wanted to help Hawaii by providing affordable housing in a tight housing market. In 1988 he pledged to build 2,000 houses on Oahu to correct “wrong impressions” about Japanese investors. He made some false starts, but he never built any housing here.

There was, for instance, the second phase of housing construction at Kapolei, which the state had picked him to build. But Kawamoto bailed out of the project because, he said, local politicians wouldn’t agree to let him hand out keys to the new homes once they were built. There was also the rental apartment complex he announced that he would build in Kakaako, but he never followed through. And there were the 147 acres he bought in Kihei, where he planned to build 1,050 homes—half of them affordable units. But after disagreements with the county over water, sewer and drainage, that project fell through, too.

As eccentric billionaires tend to be, Kawamoto was full of surprises. In 1988 he bought the former Portlock estate of industrialist Henry Kaiser for $42.5 million—at the time the highest price paid for a house in the U.S. Six years later, declaring that Bishop Estate, the leaseholder, wanted too much money for the fee interest on the property, he simply walked away from the house, surrendering the keys and swallowing the loss.

There were petty incidents, like in 2001, when he tore up the driveway that two of his neighbors used in Kahaluu and posted a “no trespassing” sign. It was Christmas Eve.

There were incidents that sent shockwaves through entire communities. In 2002, he evicted residents from 800 homes in Hawaii and California (where he actually had built housing), initially giving tenants just 30 days notice, but later extending that by 60 days. The uproar over the mass evictions led California to strengthen its tenants-rights laws.

The personal belongings Kawamoto left at his former properties were sold at auction in November.

In Hawaii, the evictions preceded the mass sell-off of his residential properties, many of which had fallen into disrepair. It also marked the beginning of his investments along Kahala Avenue.

By 2006, Kawamoto’s presence along Kahala Avenue had become so distressing to his neighbors that the Waialae-Kahala Neighborhood Board formed a blighted-properties committee. It may as well have been called the Genshiro Kawamoto Committee. “What to do about Kawamoto” was a constant topic of discussion. Neighbors considered a lawsuit, but decided that taking on a billionaire with advanced legal representation would be prohibitively expensive. They talked about approaching the Japanese Consulate, and they considered protesting during the Sony Open. But mostly, they railed against the City and County of Honolulu for not cracking down harder on Kawamoto for numerous code violations.

Constant pressure from Kahala residents eventually led the Honolulu City Council to create a new property blight law, dubbed the Kawamoto Bill, which raised the fine for unresolved property neglect violations from $1,000 a day to $5,000 a day. It’s unclear if that got Kawamoto’s attention or whether the timing was coincidental, but the month after the fines went into effect, Alexander & Baldwin announced it had bought Kawamoto’s properties.

Not everyone on Kahala Avenue was happy to see Kawamoto go. For the three native Hawaiian families house-sitting in Kahala, it was Kawamoto who was the angel.

“Whatever anybody else has against him, we don’t see it like that,” says Trisha Kahale, who was 14 when her mother and four sisters moved from a homeless shelter in Kalaeloa to the four-bedroom, two-story colonial home along Kahala Avenue. “He let us live here, in a place like this. He let us live here freely, however we wanted to. He never bothered us. We could party here and he wouldn’t even grumble.”

Seventeen people live at the Kahales’ residence now, including grandchildren and significant others. They and the other Hawaiian families have until March 1 to move out, and Alexander & Baldwin has put them in touch with a social service agency to help relocate them.

Kahale says the use of the house helped the family get on its feet. “Everybody and their other halves are more stable now and more able to afford their own stuffs,” she says. “Even if it’s bad we do have to make it so short in Kahala, we still enjoyed it while it lasted.”

Kawamoto could not be reached for this story, but HONOLULU Magazine got an exclusive interview with him in 2007, when he was happily still talking about his Kahala Avenue Mission. At the time, he planned to put Hawaiian families in at least eight homes.

“So the eight families, say they have 50 relatives and friends each, that will bring another 400 people to visit Kahala Avenue and have parties,” he said. “I want that community of 400 to play on the beach. That’s what I really wanted. If every weekend, a couple of hundred people visit the families and have fun, the project will be successful.”

When we asked Kawamoto what drives his Hawaii real estate decisions, he said: “I don’t actually think of what I do as a business. It’s a game. If there’s something I’m interested in, I just do it. Maybe you want to ask me why I’m giving away so many millions now on Kahala Avenue and not asking for anything back—do you want to ask me?”

We did, and so—after Kawamoto explained that he only uses his private money in Hawaii, never his business’ money—he said: “The whole point of the homeless people is because I wanted to do something fun with the money. The hundreds of millions don’t really matter to me. I just want the families to be happy and have fun.”

When we asked him about his hobbies, he said he enjoys gardening and “styling and decorating” his houses. Then he said this: “Maybe you can say Kahala Avenue is my hobby, too. Instead of styling a house, I’m styling a town. I’m styling Kahala Avenue.”

Now, a decade after his grand makeover project began, Kahala Avenue is free to return to its original style.

http://www.honolulumagazine.com/Honolulu-Magazine/January-2014/The-Worst-Neighbor-on-the-Block-Genshiro-Kawamoto/

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Auction set for Kawamoto’s Kahala Avenue statues, furnishings

November 23, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Nov 18, 2013, 7:30am HST
Staff  |  Pacific Business News

Alexander & Baldwin’s property arm said Tuesday that it is acquiring 31 residential properties in Honolulu’s Kalaha neighborhood from Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto for $98 million. Seen here is one of the properties along Kahala Avenue.

Alexander & Baldwin’s property arm said Tuesday that it is acquiring 31 residential properties in Honolulu’s Kalaha neighborhood from Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto for $98 million. Seen here is one of the properties along Kahala Avenue.

The dozens of statues that once adorned Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto’s Kahala Avenue properties in East Honolulu, as well as the furniture and decor found in some of the mansions, are being sold at auction this weekend.

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reports Alexander & Baldwin (NYSE: ALEX), which bought Kawamoto’s Hawaii properties for $98 million, has hired Oahu Auctions to conduct the sale, which will be held on Saturday at one of the former Kawamoto properties at 4631 Kahala Ave. The newspaper reports Oahu Auctions is selling the items as is, in lots with no reserves or upset pricing.

A&B, meanwhile, is in the process of selling off the 27 Kahala properties.

Filed Under: Featured Blog, KAHALA AREA, Luxury real estate, luxury real estate Oahu

Alexander & Baldwin removing, selling Kawamoto’s Kahala Avenue statues

October 9, 2013 By idx guys Leave a Comment

Sep 30, 2013, 2:54pm HST Updated: Sep 30, 2013, 3:26pm HST

Duane Shimogawa  |  Reporter- Pacific Business News

The dozens of statues that once covered Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto’s Kahala Avenue properties in East Honolulu are being removed and will be sold, according to a source close to the situation.

Statues are seen at a Kahala Avenue property formerly owned by Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto, who sold all 27 of his Kahala properties to Alexander & Baldwin Inc. for $98 million. A&B is in the process of removing the statues, which will be sold.

Statues are seen at a Kahala Avenue property formerly owned by Japanese billionaire Genshiro Kawamoto, who sold all 27 of his Kahala properties to Alexander & Baldwin Inc. for $98 million. A&B is in the process of removing the statues, which will be sold.

Alexander & Baldwin Inc., which is buying Kawamoto’s Hawaii properties for $98 million — including 27 along Kahala Avenue, known by some as the Beverly Hills of Hawaii — said that it is proceeding with the cleanup of the properties, but has no further comment at this time on the progress of those activities.

The source also told PBN that the Honolulu-based high-end landscaping company called Performance Landscapes has been contracted by A&B to do the clean-up work, which includes dropping trees, clearing rubbish as well as removing those highly visible statues.

“They sold some statues and they donated some of the money,” the source said. “Right now, they’re being moved to another property.”

The source also pointed out that some people have shown interest in purchasing the statues, mainly wanting a piece of Kawamoto history to add to their collections.

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Filed Under: Featured Blog, Kahala, KAHALA AREA, Luxury Condos for sale, Luxury real estate, luxury real estate Oahu Tagged With: Celebrity home, Celebrity Homes, luxury, Luxury Estate, Luxury Estate Honolulu, Luxury Experiences, Luxury Experiences Honolulu, Luxury Home, Luxury Home Honolulu, Luxury Homes, Luxury Homes Honolulu, Luxury Honolulu, Luxury Living, Luxury Mansion, luxury real estate, Luxury Resort, Luxury Villa Honolulu, LuxuryHomes, LuxuryHomes.com, Mansion, Mansion Honolulu, Million Dollar Estates, Million Dollar Estates Honolulu, Million Dollar Home, Million Dollar Home Honolulu, Most expensive, Most expensive Honolulu, Ocean View Honolulu, Penthouse Celebrity home, Penthouse Honolulu

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