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Kaimukī, Hawaii

Neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii, United States

Kaimukī, Hawaii

Neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii, United States

Aerial view of Diamond Head with Kaimukī to the upper left

Kaimukī is a residential neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii, United States.

History

Kaimukī from Pu{{okina}}u o Kaimukī Mini Park

In the 19th century, the area was a farm of King Kalākaua, where ostriches roamed wild over the mountain side. It later became the site of a carnation farm for funeral flowers. Now a mix of residential area with a small business district (mainly restaurants and service industries), it is located in the urbanized Honolulu region near Kahala and Diamond Head.

Kaimukī is an ancient Hawaiian name. Its name comes from Ka imu kī meaning "The ti root oven" in the Hawaiian language. The area was known for the many ovens used to bake roots of kī Cordyline fruticosa, or ti, into a sweet food similar to candy.

Kaimukī's main street is Waialae Avenue, pronounced . Several restaurants and stores are located on this street, as well as Kaimukī District Park.

Puu o Kaimukī aka “Kaimukī Hill” is the predominant feature of the area and has been a reservoir, a telegraph station, an observatory, and now a park. A metallic Christmas tree now stands on top of the hill, which is also called Menehune Hill.

Architecture

The neighborhood of Kaimukī is home to historic buildings. The Kaimuki Fire Station, designed in the Spanish Mission Style by G.R. Miller, was built in 1924 and is still used as a station today. The Queen Theater, designed by Lyman Bigelow, opened in 1936 but closed in 1985.

Education

Kapiʻolani Community College, one of ten branches of the public University of Hawaiʻi System, is located in Kaimukī as is the private Chaminade University.

Saint Louis School for boys and Sacred Hearts Academy for girls are located in Kaimukī as well as St. Patrick School (COED K-8). Kaimukī Christian School (COED P3-11) is located on Koko Head Avenue.

The Hawaii Japanese School - Rainbow Gakuen (ハワイレインボー学園 Hawai Rainbō Gakuen), a supplementary weekend Japanese school, holds its classes in Kaimukī Middle School in Honolulu and has its offices in another building in Honolulu.

Notable residents

  • Israel Kamakawiwoʻole (1959–1997), musician and singer

References

References

  1. "About Kaimuki, Hawaii". community web site.
  2. HistoricHawaii. "Kaimuki: A Brief History".
  3. "Kaimuki: A Brief History".
  4. Keany, Michael. (2008-10-25). "Bring a (Small) Blanket to Visit 7 of the Smallest City Parks on O‘ahu.".
  5. "Kaimuki: A Brief History".
  6. "Queen Theater".
  7. "Visit Our Campus {{!}} Kapiʻolani Community College". Kapiʻolani Community College.
  8. "Chaminade University of Honolulu". KaimukiHawaii.com.
  9. "Homepage".
  10. "[http://www.hjschl.org/ Home page]." Hawaii Japanese School - Rainbow Gakuen. Retrieved on April 16, 2015. "事務所住所:2454 South Beretania St., #202 Honolulu, HI 96826" and "授業実施校:Kaimuki Middle School"
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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