Lapita has over 6 km of tropical white sand beach on Aore Island. Lapita consists of beachfront and island view land. Three resort sites, one of the resort sites has been sold with all government approvals, and construction of the resort will start shortly. So, Over 300 meters of beachfront land on Aore Island Vanuatu are waiting for you.
Today we would like to show you 35 to 44 Coconut Drive. Over 300 meters of tropical white sand beaches. The blocks are cleared, leave and ready for construction. Essential trees have been left along the coastline for the new owners.
The ten blocks are sold in one lot but keep the ten titles.
The owner has told us these lots must be sold. The blocks have been discounted by 40% from retail pricing. They are making it a great buy.
The site has all approvals in place for construction. Each lot is zoned commercial/tourism and residential. This covers everything from building your dream holiday home to your boutique resort.
About Aore Island
Sitting on the same latitude as Port Douglas in Australia, across 1700 km of open Coral Sea, the same distance as Port Douglas is to Brisbane, is Vanuatu’s Aore Island.
This is the heart of James Michener’s Adventures in Paradise. Arguably one of the most beautiful South Pacific islands, Aore is genuinely unique. Due to its unsurpassed natural beauty and pristine marine environment, the warm, friendly smiles of the local Ni-Vanuatu people, the balmy tropical breezes, and the wild native orchids.
Located in the northern Sanma Province and sitting at the foot of Vanuatu’s largest island, Espiritu Santo, Aore has a tropical ambience that words alone cannot describe: gently swaying palms; pristine white sandy beaches; luxuriant vegetation; tropical marine corals and, a myriad of colourful fish species. Added to this are sunsets that take your breath away from beachfront land on Aore.
The Bruat and Segond Channels narrowly separate Aore from the surrounding islands of Espiritu Santo, Malo and Tituba. The landmass of Aore, roughly 11 kilometres in length and 9 kilometres at its widest point, has common origins with many islands throughout the South Pacific, volcanic uplift and later coral formations. Over time the corals continued to build, and the land rose from the sea. Wind, birds and ocean currents provided the seeds, high rainfall and warm temperatures making the environment conducive to growth and enabling the dense tropical vegetation to flourish.
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