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Japanese Consulate-General, Honolulu (在ホノルル日本国総領事館, Zai Honoruru Nippon-koku Sōryōjikan) is Japan's diplomatic facility in the City and County of Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. The facility is located at 1742 Nuuanu Avenue. The facility's jurisdiction includes Hawaii and American Samoa. [1]
The chancery of the Consulate General in Honolulu is a two-storey mansion constructed in 1905. [4]Originally owned by the family of German-born businessman William Pfotenhauer, [10] who was hailed as one of Honolulu's greatest businessmen upon his death in 1913, [11] the house later passed to the possession of another German couple, Kauaʻi sugar barons Albert and Florence Horner, to serve as ...
Consular district of TECO Honolulu. Following the signing of the Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the United States and the People's Republic of China which resulted in the United States terminating diplomatic relations with the Republic of China, the consulate of the Republic of China in Honolulu was closed on 28 February 1979.
The Consular Corps, founded in 1824 and one of the oldest organizations in Hawaii, represents over 35 countries and serves visitors to the islands as well as foreign nationals living in the state.
Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Honolulu: Hawaii, American Samoa and Palmyra Atoll: Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Guam (merged into consular jurisdiction of Embassy in Palau, from 31 August 2017 to 2020. Restored consular post in Guam since summer 2020.) Guam and the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI)
Hawaii Route 61 has several free scenic lookouts, including the Pali Lookout. The Queen Emma Summer Palace is also on the Pali (2913 Pali Hwy). The following foreign consulates are located on the Pali: Consulate General of Korea, 2756 Pali Hwy; Consulate General of the Philippines, 2433 Pali Hwy; Taipei Economic and Cultural Office, 2746 Pali Hwy
The U.S. Immigration Office in Honolulu, Hawaii was constructed in 1934 based on a design by C.W. Dickey and Herbert C. Cayton. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [1] Dickey was raised on Maui and became the acknowledged master of what became known as the "territorial style" of Hawaiian architecture.
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