1919 Ualakaa Street/ Greenwell House
Address 1919 Ualakaa Street, Honolulu HI 96822 TMK (1) 2-5-001:005 SHPD Historic Site Number 80-14-9836 Abstract Greenwell House is a two-story Colonial Revival house constructed in 1925 in the Makiki neighborhood in Honolulu. The house is significant for its architecture as an example of the popular American Colonial Revival style, adapted to Hawaii. It features a rectangular plan, horizontal clapboard siding, hip roof, and columned porch that runs along the front facade. The roof of the columned porch or lanai forms a second story deck. In keeping with the Colonial Revival style, the front facade is formal, symmetrical, and balanced. The main entrance features a single French door flanked by typical Colonial Revival sidelights. On both sides of the entrance, a set of double French doors open to the interior. The entire house features canec ceilings with a symmetrical molding pattern. The Greenwell family were instrumental in developing the coffee industry in Kona. H.N. Greenwell planted the first coffee plant in Kona sometime between 1828 and 1829. 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.