Pictures: 21 more. Price: $1,175,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 10 PIHAA STREET Beds: 4 Baths: 2.50 Living Area: 2,375 SF
This highly desirable home is located on a corner location on Kaanapali Hillside. Beautiful views of mountain, ocean and sunsets can be seen from many angles. Home is complemented with a large patio and yard area. This is a great buy for a 4 bedroom home with 3-car garage!
Pictures: 22 more. Price: $1,850,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 201 WAHI'OLE WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,035 SF
You'll enjoy fantastic views of the Pacific, neighbor islands, and year round sunsets from this residential condo in a dually gated community. The home is professionally decorated, completely funished and turnkey! This 3 Bedrooms, 3 Bath is a private free standing residential condo with nice furnishings, a cul-de-sac location, a 2 car garage, views, and a private lanai from which to enjoy year round gorgeous ocean sunsets.
Pictures: 29 more. Price: $1,880,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 86 S IWA PLACE Beds: 4 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,600 SF
Stylish front line 3 bedroom, 3 bath home with office that could be a 4th bedroom; remodeled in 2007 with amazing ocean views from virtually all the rooms in the home. Lush mature landscaping, large yard with a spa, pool and deck with great views make outdoor living a feature of this open, airy home. An open floor plan, granite, travertine, hardwood, plush carpet, skylight and a great master suite with views from every area make this home a must see.
Pictures: 10 more. Price: $1,950,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 346 A'ALII WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 2.50 Living Area: 2,192 SF
Immaculate, serene home; tiled great room, high vaulted ceilings with amazing ocean and island views.
Pictures: 22 more. Price: $2,000,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 20 N IWA PLACE Beds: 5 Baths: 5.50 Living Area: 4,233 SF
Located in the Kaanapali Hillside, this home has it all; beautiful landscaping, great views, lovely private pool, and a peaceful neighborhood. Vaulted ceilings and charming furnishings give this home a very open and relaxing environment, inside and out. Master bedroom and bathroom are beautifully designed and very spacious.
Pictures: 24 more. Price: $2,295,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 325 KAINOE STREET Beds: 3 Baths: 3.50 Living Area: 2,600 SF
Gorgeous new home located on the popular Kaanapali Hillside. This single-story home features 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths and 2,600 s.f. of living space. A beautiful pool adds to this home's great character, along with its stunning ocean and mountain views. Great detail includes granite, travertine, high-end appliances, imperial plaster, extended overhang and spa. This home is a MUST-SEE!!
Pictures: 16 more. Price: $2,395,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 229 AMAKIHI WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 4.00 Living Area: 3,498 SF
Completed in early 2000. Excellent ocean views. Casually elegant. Living room, dining room, master suite and office are located on the main upper level. Two guest suites and a large family room are located on the lower level, opening to large pool and deck. All cabinets by SieMatic "American Series", Corian counter tops throughout kitchen and all baths. Fourth bedroom has been converted into an office.
Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,395,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 38 N IWA PLACE Beds: 4 Baths: 4.50 Living Area: 3,427 SF
BRAND NEW home on the Kaanapali Hillside! Beautiful Views, Lovely Design, Great Location! The home has Brazilian cherry hardwood, Imperial plaster, mahogany doors and trim, travertine flooring, Dura Supreme kitchen cabinets, Wolf appliances, 30-inch oven, convection microwave, warming drawer, cook top, SubZero refrigerator, SubZero wine cooler, 3 Fisher & Paykel dishwashers, glass lanai rails, 2.5 stall garage, split level central air, formal dining room, kitchen nook with views, large lanai with pocket doors, and a Saline pool and hot tub with a large lanai and bar area for entertaining. 3,427 square feet of living space, with an approximate 1,100-square foot lanai. Must see this great value!
Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,475,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 32 N PIKI PLACE Beds: 3 Baths: 3.50 Living Area: 3,199 SF
This beautifully remodeled home has been completely redone and upgraded in every way, offering the look and feel of a brand new home. You will love the attention to detail, from the custom-designed entrance of koa and etched glass to the state-of-the-art kitchen with top of the line appliances and SieMatic cabinets. This spacious home offers an open floor plan with high ceilings and quality throughout, including granite countertops, travertine flooring and a custom koa staircase. Experience breathtaking sunsets and spectacular views of the ocean, Molokai and Lanai from the master bedroom, living room and dining room. Enjoy the outdoors under the large covered lanais, lush landscaping and relaxing in the beautiful pool. Perfect for entertaining.
Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,499,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 357 KULUI WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,513 SF
This elegant 3 bed/3 bath fully furnished home features finishes of travertine, cherrywood cabinetry, and granite tile countertops. Furnishings include 2 refrigerators, plasma TV, alarm system, and beautiful stainless steel kitchen appliances. Turnkey. Amazing ocean views complement the heated pool and lanai.
There are about twelve species of Allamanda. Some are woody climbers and other are more shrub-like in habit. The Golden Trumpet is called lani-ali'i, "heavenly chief," by the Hawaiians and is one of the most widely used plants in Hawaii for landscaping. One expert says the Hawaiian name may have been given to the allamanda because it was recognized as a flower "fit for a king." (In ancient times, yellow and gold were considered royal colors.)
Natives of Brazil, they are usually vigorous, sprawling green vines. They are often used as ground cover in dry, sunny places or to add softness to walls and terraces, especially in sandy seaside gardens where they do particularly well. They are grown in parks, lowland resorts, gardens and yards for the fragrant, large, velvety golden-yellow flowers, from three to five inches in diameter. The flowers cover the vines almost every day of the year. The vines rarely bear fruit in Hawaii.
Each flower is a tube that spreads into five thick lobes. The flowers grow in terminal clusters with two or three buds opening at a time. The buds are pointed, brownish in color and can look as if they have been varnished.
The leaves are smooth, thick and a pointed oval, growing in fours and forming a cross or whorl where they join the stem. They are a light green. In India some people consider a tea made from the allamanda bark to be a good laxative. In Columbia and in Cuba the sap or a tea made from the leaves was also used in medicine. However, be aware that all parts of the plant including its milky sap are considered to be mildly toxic and is likely to cause vomiting and diarrhea. Still, allamanda is not a common cause of illness or skin rash in Hawaii. Usually the symptoms produced by this plant (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and/or rash) disappear without treatment.
Other Allamanda varieties include A. oenotheraefolia, a native of Brazil which is more of a shrub, and A. violacea, another native of Brazil, which has reddish-purple flowers rather than the customary yellow ones. There is also a form with silvery-gray leaves.
When the sugar plantations were in the development stages, the companies provided medical services as well as housing, transportation and other community services for the large numbers of immigrant workers that they imported to work in the fields. The rivalry during the late 1800's between the two top sugar producers in East Maui - HC&S (Hawaiian Commercial and Sugar, a California corporation owned at the time by California sugar magnate Claus Spreckels) and the various permutations of the Alexander and Baldwin conglomerate of smaller, independently owned plantations, started an interesting hospital "dance"
One of the first hospitals to be opened for these workers and other Maui residents of the area was built by HC&S in 1885. It was located at Spreckelsville.
In 1898 (around the time Alexander and Baldwin became the principal shareholders of HC&S and Spreckels left the islands for good) a small hospital was established in Lower Paia by their Paia Plantation. Dr. Aiken was the resident physician, succeeded by Dr. McConkey. (In later years the buildings for that hospital were used for the Paia Club House and for the East Maui Community Association headquarters).
Then in 1903, the Paia Plantation formed a partnership with the Haiku Sugar Company to allow for joint operation of a sugar mill and other facilities. This partnership was called Maui Agricultural Company, Ltd. (Eventually, the original companies merged with five other small companies - Kailua Plantation, Kalialinui Plantation, Kula Plantation, Makawao Plantation and Pulehu Plantation so they could pool their resources.)
That same year, a wing was added to the Spreckelsville Hospital and an X-ray machine was added.
In 1909, the new Paia Hospital in Upper Paia, one of the largest, most up-to-date hospitals in the Territory of Hawaii, replaced the old hospital in Lower Paia. Built by the Maui Agricultural Company, it stood on Baldwin Avenue below Makawao Union church. (The site is marked now by a small monument set on the roadside next to waving sugarcane.) The hospital was built just as the plantations were expanding their work forces with immigrants from Russia, Portugal and the Philippines. In 1910, an epidemic of smallpox broke out among the Filipino worker population, and they were cared for by the medical staffs of both the Paia and the Spreckelsville hospitals.
Then, in January, 1912, a Maui News article announced that the Paia hospital had obtained a "fine new ambulance," and said it was "the first one to arrive on Maui. The vehicle had been ordered from the factory of the White Automobile Company.
In 1913 a new HC&S hospital was built at Puunene in central Maui and the old Spreckelsville Hospital was closed. Six years later, in 1919, there was a major influenza epidemic. A "total of 4,000 cases of influenza with perhaps 50 deaths," were reported between January 25 and February 21, 1919, according to the Maui News. Half of the cases were in East Maui and seven deaths there were attributed to the epidemic.
By 1930, HC&S, the largest sugar plantation on Maui, had as many as 26 camps housing more than 7,000 people. Within the plantation there were four public schools, three Japanese language schools, 10 churches, 12 day nurseries, three theaters, one gymnasium, a public swimming facility and the hospital. Government policies enacted in the late 1940's and in the 1950's, as well as a more articulate, independent workforce that organized themselves into unions, and an exodus of the workers' children from the camps as more opportunities for other kinds of work opened up would lead to the eventual breaking down of the old plantation camps and villages and to the birth of new towns and communities.
By 1948, the Territorial Senate had appropriated funds for the construction of the Central Maui Memorial Hospital. By the late 1940's the Paia Hospital was getting old. It was closed, and then reopened as the Maui Children's Home in 1949. (The orphanage closed in 1965.)
The new Maui Memorial Hospital was dedicated on August 17, 1952. World War II veteran Masao Aizawa spoke for the County's ex-servicemen at the celebration. He said, "This is indeed a fitting memorial to those who gave their all...."
On September 17, 1952, at 7:33 a.m. Gerald Lau Hee was the first baby born in the new hospital. His father, Thomas Lau Hee, was a World War II veteran. His mother was the former Alma Komatsu of Wailuku. He was delivered by Dr. Katuyuki Izumi.
Puunene Hospital was closed four years later, in 1956, and its services consolidated with those of Maui Memorial Hospital.
Before the arrival of Captain James Cook, Hawaiian was only a spoken language. They did not write to preserve history, instead they preserved their history in chants and legends. When Captain James Cook arrived to the islands in 1778, he realized how similar the Hawaiian language was to Tahitian and Maori.
When the missionaries came in 1820, they wanted to spread Christianity and set up schools and churches. So, the missionaries created a 12 letter alphabet based on their own roman alphabet and the sounds they heard. The alphabet was 5 vowels a, e, i, o, u and 7 consonants h, k, l, m, n, p, w. Today the modern Hawaiian alphabet includes those 5 vowels and 8 consonants, the eighth consonant is the ( ‘ ) ‘okina, and one grammatical mark, the kahakō, which is used to lengthen vowels.
Learn the Hawaiian Alphabet
In the Hawaiian alphabet there are 5 vowels:
A
E
I
O
U
(AH)
(EH)
(EE)
(OH)
(OO)
There also is those same 5 vowels with a kahakō over each vowel:
Ā
Ē
Ī
Ō
Ū
A Kahakō is a symbol that whenever its over a vowel, the wowel is drawn-out, you just lengthen the sound, don't raise the pitch of your voice.
Then there are 8 Consonants:
H
K
L
M
N
P
W
‘ (‘Okina)
(HEH)
(KEH)
(LAH)
(MOO)
(NOO)
(PEE)
(VEH/WEH)
(OH KEE NAH)
To pronounce H, K, L, M, N, P is the same as in English. The "W" is usually pronounced as if it was a "V" sound, but when the "W" is after the vowels "U" and "O" it's usually pronounced as a "W" sound.
The ‘okina is a "Glottal Stop," You stop whatever vowel sound you are saying, then switch to the next one. ("Oh-Oh" is an example with a break in it)
Rules To Remember:
There must be one vowel in each word
A vowel must be between each consonant, no consonants can be next to each other, like ml, np, hk, `k, etc.