
By the late 1960s the company had consolidated as Maui Land & Pineapple, and its leaders began imagining a second life for the land along the shore. In 1975 the first golf course opened above Kapalua Bay, and the first hotel followed soon after — the beginning of Kapalua Resort, a master-planned community built right on top of the working plantation. For a while the two coexisted: golfers and guests below, pineapple fields still climbing the hills above. Slowly the balance tipped, until the resort became the main event and the fields became the backdrop — a Hawaiian place remaking itself, as Hawaiian places had before, around whoever was arriving by sea.
That crop was pineapple. In 1912 Fleming and Harry Baldwin planted the first twenty acres, and the sweet, sun-grown Kapalua fruit was so good that the family moved the whole operation toward it — building a cannery, a plantation railroad, a store, and villages for the workers who came to the fields. Honolua Ranch became Baldwin Packers, which grew into one of the largest producers of private-label pineapple and pineapple juice in the country. For most of the twentieth century, pineapple was West Maui: the green-and-gold fields climbed the slopes above the bays, and the work of the plantation set the rhythm of the coast. The pineapple mark that still stands for Kapalua comes straight off that era.
Why People Visit Kapalua
Visitors come to Kapalua for the bays — the calm, reef-fringed water that earns the best-beach lists — and stay for the layered scenery: a manicured golf coast, plantation uplands, and the channel islands on the horizon. It is quiet, walkable, and built to let West Maui's landscape take the lead. Equal parts beach, history, and big ocean views, Kapalua rewards anyone who wants the Hawaiian coast at its most embracing.