Yearly Archives: 2014

49-705 Kamehameha Highway/ Elma Schadt House

Address 49-705 Kamehameha Highway, Kaaawa, HI 96730 TMK (1) 4-9-008:012 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-06-1351 Abstract The Elma Schadt House was built in 1931. It is a one-story residence and has a hipped roof and is distinguished by its use of coral heads as a building material. It also features arched entry ways and windows. The Elma Schadt House is significant primarily for its unique use of coral heads as a building material. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T12:36:48-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

56-102 Keawemauhili Place/ Kahuku Plantation Supervisor’s House

Address 56-102 Keawemauhili Place, Kahuku, HI 96731 TMK (1) 5-6-010:158 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-02-9816 Abstract This one-story house, which was built in 1929, has a U-shaped plan, hip-and-valley roof and open overhanging eaves. The interior features a canec ceiling, decorative wood crown moulding, and wood baseboards and thresholds. The Kahuku Plantation Supervisor's House is significant as an example of the type of residence constructed for a mid-level manager of a sugar plantation in Hawaii.  It is also associated with the social history of the Kahuku Sugar Plantation. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T12:28:05-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

68-657 Crozier Drive/ Mrs. Mary Anehe Mendonca Beach Cottage

Address 68-657 Crozier Drive, Waialua, HI 96791 TMK (1) 6-8-004:001 SHPD Historic Site Number N/A Abstract The Mrs. Mary Anehe Mendonca Beach Cottage was designed by architect Ray Morris and constructed in 1936. The residence is situated on a point and is a single story, L-shaped, Hawaiian style house. The house features single wall construction with a double pitched, hip roof, and board and batten siding. The residence runs parallel to the beach in roughly an east-west direction. The Mrs. Mary Anehe Mendonca Beach Cottage is significant architectural on a local level as an example of a Hawaiian style beach cottage constructed in Hawaii. In addition, it is significant for its associations with the history of Mokuleia and its development as a beach community. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T12:25:43-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

89-425 Pohakukini Avenue/ Kamaunu Residence

Address 89-425 Pohakunui Avenue, Nanakuli, HI 96762 TMK (1) 8-9-006:039 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-08-9756 Abstract The Kamaunu Residence was built in 1931. The house has a hipped roof, casement windows, and is elevated on a post on block foundation that is covered with vertical wood slates. The interior features tongue and groove paneling and much of the original materials including windows, doors, built-ins, and hardware. The Kamaunu Residence is significant for its association with the early development of Hawaiian Homelands homesteads in Nanakuli.  It is a rare example of a draftsman designed and carpenter constructed house built in the area in the early 1930s. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-04-21T12:19:07-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

3860 Old Pali Road/ Clarence H. Cooke Residence

Address 3860 Old Pali Road, Honolulu, HI 96817 TMK (1) 9-0-050:040 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-14-1366 National Register of Historic Places #86001619 Abstract The Clarence Cooke Residence was built in 1932 and is significant for its architecture and association with Clarence Hyde Cooke, a prominent businessman who became president of Bank of Hawaii in 1909 and was elected to the Territorial legislature in 1913. Designed by Hardie Phillip, who designed several other outstanding Hawaiian-style buildings in Honolulu such as the C. Brewer Building and former residence of Governor Carter, the house is a twenty-four room mansion rendered in a Hawaiian style of architecture. The two-story, white-washed brick and frame residence features an asymmetrical plan which lends the building a sense of sprawling informality. Well-planned, well-crafted, and known for paying high attention to detail, the house was built for lavish, opulent entertainment which it came to be associated with. As such, it epitomizes the finest traditions in upper-class residential design in Hawaii for its period. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015.

2017-05-11T11:48:21-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: , |

91-1081 Luahine Street/Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages

Address 91-1081 Luahine Street, Ewa Beach HI 96706 TMK (1) 9-1-095:014 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-12-9786 Abstract The historic district of Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages is on the dry southwestern coast of the island of Oahu, known as the Honouliuli plain. It is significant for its association with Ewa Sugar Plantation, which played an influential role in Hawaii's economy, culture, and politics throughout most of the twentieth century. It is also significant as an historic district for its vernacular architecture. The district includes the Verona, Tenney, and Renton Villages, which are 3 of the 8 that formerly provided worker housing for the Ewa Sugar Plantation. The district includes 285 contributing structures, 1 cemetery, and 2 non-contributing buildings. Each of the distinct villages was expressive of different cultures and ethnic groups, had its own architectural and landscaping character with physical separation formerly by cane fields, now open fields. Within the villages, a grid pattern with a hierarchy of streets organizes the layout. Most of the workers’ houses are rectangular, hip-roof, single-wall construction, and sited to create maximum cross-ventilation. The plantation restricted the homes' colors to white, off white, rust, red slate, gray and green. In addition, several of the prominent buildings were designed by master architects, such as Hart Wood's administration building and William Furer's plantation store. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015. [...]

2017-04-21T12:15:49-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

91-1684 Orrick Street/Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages

Address 91-1684 Orrick Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706 TMK (1) 9-1-095:021 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-12-9786 Abstract The historic district of Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages is on the dry southwestern coast of the island of Oahu, known as the Honouliuli plain. It is significant for its association with Ewa Sugar Plantation, which played an influential role in Hawaii's economy, culture, and politics throughout most of the twentieth century. It is also significant as an historic district for its vernacular architecture. The district includes the Verona, Tenney, and Renton Villages, which are 3 of the 8 that formerly provided worker housing for the Ewa Sugar Plantation. The district includes 285 contributing structures, 1 cemetery, and 2 non-contributing buildings. Each of the distinct villages was expressive of different cultures and ethnic groups, had its own architectural and landscaping character with physical separation formerly by cane fields, now open fields. Within the villages, a grid pattern with a hierarchy of streets organizes the layout. Most of the workers’ houses are rectangular, hip-roof, single-wall construction, and sited to create maximum cross-ventilation. The plantation restricted the homes' colors to white, off white, rust, red slate, gray and green. In addition, several of the prominent buildings were designed by master architects, such as Hart Wood's administration building and William Furer's plantation store. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015. [...]

2017-04-21T11:33:19-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

91-1685 Burke Street/Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages

Address 91-1685 Burke Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706 TMK (1) 9-1-095:025 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-12-9786 Abstract The historic district of Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages is on the dry southwestern coast of the island of Oahu, known as the Honouliuli plain. It is significant for its association with Ewa Sugar Plantation, which played an influential role in Hawaii's economy, culture, and politics throughout most of the twentieth century. It is also significant as an historic district for its vernacular architecture. The district includes the Verona, Tenney, and Renton Villages, which are 3 of the 8 that formerly provided worker housing for the Ewa Sugar Plantation. The district includes 285 contributing structures, 1 cemetery, and 2 non-contributing buildings. Each of the distinct villages was expressive of different cultures and ethnic groups, had its own architectural and landscaping character with physical separation formerly by cane fields, now open fields. Within the villages, a grid pattern with a hierarchy of streets organizes the layout. Most of the workers’ houses are rectangular, hip-roof, single-wall construction, and sited to create maximum cross-ventilation. The plantation restricted the homes' colors to white, off white, rust, red slate, gray and green. In addition, several of the prominent buildings were designed by master architects, such as Hart Wood's administration building and William Furer's plantation store. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015. [...]

2017-04-21T11:31:54-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

91-1083 Pahe Street/Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages

Address 91-1083 Pahe Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706 TMK (1) 9-1-095:030 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-12-9786 Abstract The historic district of Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages is on the dry southwestern coast of the island of Oahu, known as the Honouliuli plain. It is significant for its association with Ewa Sugar Plantation, which played an influential role in Hawaii's economy, culture, and politics throughout most of the twentieth century. It is also significant as an historic district for its vernacular architecture. The district includes the Verona, Tenney, and Renton Villages, which are 3 of the 8 that formerly provided worker housing for the Ewa Sugar Plantation. The district includes 285 contributing structures, 1 cemetery, and 2 non-contributing buildings. Each of the distinct villages was expressive of different cultures and ethnic groups, had its own architectural and landscaping character with physical separation formerly by cane fields, now open fields. Within the villages, a grid pattern with a hierarchy of streets organizes the layout. Most of the workers’ houses are rectangular, hip-roof, single-wall construction, and sited to create maximum cross-ventilation. The plantation restricted the homes' colors to white, off white, rust, red slate, gray and green. In addition, several of the prominent buildings were designed by master architects, such as Hart Wood's administration building and William Furer's plantation store. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations of eligibility, contact the State Historic Preservation Division of the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the State of Hawaii at 808-692-8015. [...]

2017-04-21T12:13:04-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |

91-1081 Pualu Street/Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages

[styledMap style="classic" zoom="16" center="91-1081 Pualu Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706" width="670" height="300" ] [addMarker position="91-1081 Pualu Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706" icon="miniBlue.png" description="" ] [/styledMap] Address 91-1081 Pualu Street, ‘Ewa Beach HI 96706 TMK (1) 9-1-095:046 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-12-9786 Abstract The historic district of Ewa Sugar Plantation Villages is on the dry southwestern coast of the island of Oahu, known as the Honouliuli plain. It is significant for its association with Ewa Sugar Plantation, which played an influential role in Hawaii's economy, culture, and politics throughout most of the twentieth century. It is also significant as an historic district for its vernacular architecture. The district includes the Verona, Tenney, and Renton Villages, which are 3 of the 8 that formerly provided worker housing for the Ewa Sugar Plantation. The district includes 285 contributing structures, 1 cemetery, and 2 non-contributing buildings. Each of the distinct villages was expressive of different cultures and ethnic groups, had its own architectural and landscaping character with physical separation formerly by cane fields, now open fields. Within the villages, a grid pattern with a hierarchy of streets organizes the layout. Most of the workers’ houses are rectangular, hip-roof, single-wall construction, and sited to create maximum cross-ventilation. The plantation restricted the homes' colors to white, off white, rust, red slate, gray and green. In addition, several of the prominent buildings were designed by master architects, such as Hart Wood's administration building and William Furer's plantation store. This list of Hawaii’s historic properties is provided as a public service by Historic Hawaii Foundation. It is not the official list of properties designated on the Hawaii State Register of Historic Places. For official designations and determinations [...]

2017-04-21T01:02:33-10:00February 28th, 2014|Categories: Historic Properties|Tags: |
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