The
2018 lower Puna eruption interrupted electric power to Kapoho in late May and closed the main road to the rest of the island. On May 30, residents were urged to evacuate. On June 1, the lava flow front entered Kapoho on top of the 1960 flow and then took a turn to the south. On June 2, 2018, the
Green Lake (Ka Wai o Pele) was destroyed when lava flows boiled it away and completely filled the entire basin. The flow entered the ocean at Kapoho Bay on June 4 on a half-mile-wide (800 m) front. An unknown number of homes were destroyed by the lava on June 4, but the majority were still standing. By June 5, the lava flow had built a
lava delta that extended nearly into the bay. Hawaiʻi County officials indicated that hundreds of homes in the subdivisions of Vacationland Hawaii and Kapoho Beach Lots were destroyed by the rapidly advancing lava flow. Hawaii Island Mayor
Harry Kim's house, which he had purchased in 1971 as a second residence, was among the hundreds of houses destroyed. Over the next few days, the entirety of the bay was filled in with lava, and on June 6, Hawaii County Civil Defense reported that the few homes remaining in Vacationland had been wiped out. An adjacent subdivision, the gated Kapoho Beach Lots, also suffered lava inundation and was largely covered, along with the Kapoho tide pools, Kapoho Bay, and the nearby Champagne Ponds. By the end of June, about of new land had been created along with miles of new coastline. == See also ==