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TOGASHI:Oh, 260 feet. But anyway, never the less, you spoke about some current <br />concern over the size limitations of this lot. And letÓs say had this lot been maybe two or <br />three times in size, that you could conceivably, had it been two or three times the size of <br />the existing size that conceivably the developer could have perhaps built his project on <br />one end of the, furthest away from the Keakealaniwahine Complex. And yet, I guess, my <br />concern is that you describe the, or spoke of the size limitation, but yet you did not feel <br />that the scale of this project needed to be scaled back. And you felt that essentially the 13 <br />unit or did you say seven building, is it seven-, eight-building complex is, is appropriate <br />even for this, and any recognition of the proximity of this lot to Keakealaniwahine. And <br />IÓm just trying to get a better feel of your, that statement the <br />YUEN:I donÓt have an issue with the number of units per se in the sense of itÓs <br />going to have too many people around the area, or too many cars, or too much activity. <br />My, what I, when I spoke of the size of a lot, what I meant was that itÓs, itÓs very difficult <br />to have a meaningful or effective buffer simply by distance. You know, the more typical <br />thing is to try to, say you have a public beach area, and you have a development youÓre <br />trying to buffer the public beach area from the development; and the person has a lot like <br />in, along the north Kona coast. They might have a lot thatÓs a mile deep and are coming <br />in for a development. Well, then you have a lot of space that they can, you can work with <br />and create an effective buffer and they still have space to build on. <br />On this site, itÓs difficult. I donÓt know that just based alone, if you pushed them, youÓre <br />trying, I am trying to accommodate the economic desires of the owner. And itÓs very <br />difficult to do that with space on this property. So that was the, so thatÓs the tact I took, <br />was to try to do that with landscaping. I think you still need some space for landscaping, <br />but Î. <br />TOGASHI:So youÓre saying that the economic rights of the landowner does hold <br />some weight in your decision. And, I guess, you spoke of that analogy of having <br />development next to a public beach. And if you applied that same analogy to a smaller <br />property like this of 1.2 acres, would it not be analogous to say to reduce the scale of this <br />project here in the same analogy of a public beach next to a development, would it not be <br />analogous to do that, too? <br />YUEN:You might go through some of these same kinds of analysis. <br />using that as an example of some place if you have a deep enough lot, you can use space <br />as the buffer. In this case, they donÓt have a very, a very deep lot. And so my approach <br />was to use landscaping as a buffer. <br />And in regard to the first part of your question, yes, itÓs part of my responsibilities to take <br />into account the economic interest of a private landowner. <br />TOGASHI:Rather than just the landowner right to use his property? You know what <br />IÓm saying? I mean, there are landowner rights, and economic rights, and -. <br />8 <br /> <br />