Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kapalua Land Company, Ltd. (KLC) operates the Kapalua Resort of 1,650 acres (6.7 km 2), along with the development and sale of real estate on the resort. KLC was established in 1975 and manages resort holdings of over 800 residences, homesites and condominiums, golf courses, tennis courts, a spa, retail and pro shops.
Hawaii auto sales, stymied by the lingering effects of the Aug. 8 Maui wildfires, are expected to accelerate 3.7% this year amid the possibility of lower income rates in the upcoming months ...
In 1940, the school was renamed Kaʻū High and Pāhala Elementary School due to the drop in enrollment at Naalehu, which once had a high school. Kaʻū High and Pāhala Elementary School has one feeder school, Naalehu Elementary School, located in Naalehu, Hawaii, 13 miles (21 km) south. In 1881, the H and G buildings were built on campus.
The ancient district of Hana The modern district of Hana. Like most of Hawaii, Hana was probably first settled between 500 and 800 AD by Polynesian peoples. [2]The first sugarcane plantation in the area was established by George Wilfong in 1849, and by 1883 there were six plantations operating in the area.
The shopping center encompasses three blocks of prime Waikīkī real estate on Kalākaua Avenue. In August 2024, Kamehameha Schools was part of a $4 billion settlement related to the 2023 Maui fire. The school was a party to the lawsuit due to their ownership of large parcels of land which were poorly maintained, which in turn fed the wildfires.
Kaiser High School, Hawaiʻi Kai; Kalani High School, East Honolulu; McKinley High School, Central Honolulu; Moanalua High School, Moanalua/Salt Lake; Radford High School, Aliamanu/Pearl Harbor; Roosevelt High School, Makiki; Myron B. Thompson Academy, Honolulu; Hawaii Technology Academy, Waipahu; University Laboratory School, Honolulu
Hāna High and Elementary School is a public school in Hana, Hawaii. A part of the Hawaii Department of Education (HIDOE), it was established in 1912 and serves kindergarten through twelfth grade. The campus boasts an untitled 1977 copper and bronze sculpture by Bumpei Akaji .
The school opened in 1938 and moved to its current building in 1940. It was named for Henry Perrine Baldwin (1842–1911), co-founder of the Alexander & Baldwin corporation; his son, Henry Alexander Baldwin, broke ground for the 1940 school. [4] The campus features the bronze sculpture Kū Kilakila (1997) by Honolulu-born Joel H. K. Nakila.