翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Maki, Niigata
・ Maki, Niigata (Kanbara)
・ Maki, Niigata (Kubiki)
・ Maki, Ravar
・ Maki, Razavi Khorasan
・ Maki, Rigan
・ Maki-do Cave
・ Maki-e
・ Makiabad
・ Makian
・ Makian, Iran
・ Makiba
・ Makibishi
・ Makihito Mihara
・ Makiivka
Makiki
・ Makikihi River
・ Makiko
・ Makiko Esumi
・ Makiko Fujino
・ Makiko Furukawa
・ Makiko Hirabayashi
・ Makiko Horai
・ Makiko Kikuta
・ Makiko Kinoshita
・ Makiko Kuno
・ Makiko Ohmoto
・ Makiko Tanaka
・ Makiko Watanabe
・ Makiko Yoshida


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Makiki : ウィキペディア英語版
Makiki

Makiki is an area of Honolulu, Hawaii located northeast of downtown Honolulu generally stretching east to west from Punahou Street to Pensacola Street and north to south from Round Top Drive/Makiki Heights Drive to Lunalilo Freeway. Punchbowl, an extinct tuff cone, and Tantalus, tower over the Makiki neighborhood. The geographic layout of this area is primarily older houses, smaller apartment buildings, and side streets. Major roadways include Punahou Street, Pensacola Street, Piikoi Street, Nehoa Street, and Wilder Avenue. The area also includes a fire station, hospital, public school system, private schools including Punahou School, several churches of various denominations, a library, a community center, market place, and parks. The valley heights have hiking trails owned by the state for public use. The valley heights are mostly underdeveloped leaving room for a non-profit conservation organization named Hawaii Nature Center, to hold a small property providing conservation education and work opportunity to local schools students.
Two Makiki community organizations, Hui o Makiki and Friends of Makiki Community Library, have partnered together to create a Makiki Community with information about educational, cultural, recreational, and social-service offerings in the Makiki area, including a calendar of events.
==History==
Punahou school was opened in Makiki on July 11, 1842, to educate missionary children, on a land grant of 200 acres from Governor Boki near the site of ''Kapunahou'' water spring.〔Edward B. Scott, "The Saga of the Sandwich Islands, Vol.1". Nevada, Sierra-Tahoe Publishing Co., 1968. p. 559.〕 Makiki is also the site of the Claus "King of Sugar" Spreckels Victorian-style mansion near Dole Street, which was later refurbished and converted into the St. Louis Alumni Clubhouse.〔Edward B. Scott, "The Saga of the Sandwich Islands, Vol.1". Nevada, Sierra-Tahoe Publishing Co., 1968. p. 564-5, 574.〕 Lunalilo Home was opened in Makiki under the sponsorship of King William Charles Lunalilo for "the poor, the destitute, the infirm, and the aged people of Hawaiian blood or extraction, giving preference to old people." 〔Edward B. Scott, "The Saga of the Sandwich Islands, Vol.1". Nevada, Sierra-Tahoe Publishing Co., 1968. p. 567.〕 Central Union Church on Beretania and Punahou streets was cornerstoned on December 2, 1922 (completed in 1924), on property that belonged to the Dillingham homestead.〔Edward B. Scott, "The Saga of the Sandwich Islands, Vol.1". Nevada, Sierra-Tahoe Publishing Co., 1968. p. 574.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Makiki」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.