Project lead
The County of Maui Department of ʻŌiwi Resources is currently working with Group 70 International, Inc. (G70) to develop the Lahaina Royal Complex Master Plan. The project scope includes hydrology and water policy; wildfire resiliency and risk planning; biological and ecological assessment; cultural landscape architecture; community engagement protocol; transportation circulation planning; topographical survey; cultural and archaeological studies; soils and geotechnical studies; and boundary mapping.
Provide your comments on the draft Action Plan online, by mail or in-person at the Lahaina Resource Center or Kāko‘o Maui Relief & Aid Services Center.

Community Quote from Long-Term Planning Recovery Survey
The Lahaina impact zone needs to be revegetated with appropriate fire-resilient native plants and canoe plants to reduce fire risk and erosion. Community members want to revegetate their homes and public properties such as street medians and open spaces. Surrounding Lahaina, invasive buffelgrass has regrown in the impact zone on private lands and increases fire risks for the town. For the safety and environmental well-being of Lahaina, it is essential to form multiagency partnerships to manage the private lands surrounding the town, by removing invasive fuel loads, replanting with native plants to reduce fire and wind risk, restoring the native landscape, and creating new agriculture and agroforestry industry areas.
This project will revegetate Lahaina with native plants and culturally appropriate plants to restore the burned landscape, increase resilience, beautify the town, increase storm water infiltration and groundwater recharge, and provide food and material sources for the community. It will educate the community about native plants and resilient landscaping. This project includes key efforts such as:
This project is dependent on providing water supply to land areas mauka of Lahaina. This project is also dependent on the pace of rebuilding residential and commercial properties, as landscaping activities usually occur towards the end of a construction project.
TBD