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Ke Ola Magazine

Celebrating the Arts, Culture, and Sustainability of Hawai‘i Island

  • Morinoue’s Hale: A Gathering Place

    By Emily Gleason When you walk into Hiroki and Setsuko Morinoue’s home, the first thing you’ll notice is the art. Beautiful paintings, prints, and sculptures cover the walls and all available shelf space. Their own work comingles with that of…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • St. James’ Circle: A Hub of Resilience

    By Jan Wizinowich It’s Thursday morning and St. James’ Circle in Waimea is a humming hive of activity. The church kitchen is abuzz with volunteers cheerfully chopping ingredients, then cooking and filling pans with the evening’s weekly community meal. Another…

    By Jan Wizinowich
  • Hale Ohia: Volcano’s Enchanted Road to Old Hawai‘i

    By Sara Stover Less than two miles outside the entrance to Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park, in the heart of the small artists’ community of Volcano Village, is the Hale Ohia tract. Hidden by a thick grove of ‘ōhi‘a and Sugi…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • Fukushima Store: Repurposing a Historical Building

    By Ma‘ata Tukuafu When you walk into Union Pasifika Tattoo shop in Waimea, you are greeted with a multitude of things to look at: a dragon and tiger intertwining in a mural on the walls and ceiling, colorful artwork, vintage…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • 200 Years at Mokuaikaua Church: Preserving a Beacon of Faith in Kailua Village

    By Fern Gavelek The first Christian church established in the Hawaiian Islands lives on today as an active and caring fellowship called Mokuaikaua Church. Founded in 1820, the church is commemorating its 200th anniversary with a massive preservation of its…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Wood Valley Temple and Its Fascinating Historical Journey

    By Karen Valentine Those who wonder how a small, yet world-renowned, Buddhist temple ended up in a remote valley not far from an active volcano, may realize that a scholarly account isn’t adequate to tell the story. There must be…

    By Karen Valentine
  • Hāmākua Jodo Mission, A Beacon for Peace

    Eizuchi Higaki, who was a plantation machinist, along with Mr. Tanaka and an unknown carpenter came to the temple every day after work for two years until the transoms were finished. photo courtesy of Sarah Anderson

    By Jan Wizinowich Like a guardian spirit, the Hāmākua Jodo Mission (HJM) sits on a slope above the old plantation community of Pā‘auhau, backed by the gravestones of the many generations of members who attended and contributed to the temple.…

    By Jan Wizinowich
  • Puakõ’s Historical Hokuloa Church

    By Ma‘ata Tukuafu Driving through the tropical coastal community of Puakō, one will notice that huge mansions have replaced many of the humble beach shacks that once populated the little village of 163 homes. There is one building that is…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • Aircrete: A Versatile DIY Building Material

    Steve’s famous dome home in rural Thailand. photo courtesy of Steve Areen

    By Mālielani Larish Adopting a yoga tree-pose, Stefanie Fisher effortlessly holds an aircrete block skyward. Surrounded by the model aircrete home that she is helping to build, the sunlight streaming in through the dome’s atrium illuminates her smile. “Here, try…

    By Malie Larish
  • The Meaningful Construction of Daifukuji Soto Mission

    The front entry is a distinguishing architectural feature of the Daifukuji Solo Temple.

    By Fern Gavelek The burgundy-colored building with white trim on Highway 11 at the entrance to Honalo (South Kona) is the landmark Daifukuji Soto Mission. The temple sits a bit off the road on the mauka (mountain) side, adjacent to…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • A Lifetime in the Trees: The Vision of Skye Peterson, Treehouse Aficionado

    By Lara Hughes Skye Peterson moved to Honolulu on O‘ahu in 1980. He was a young pilot flying small planes, and he didn’t really like the work or life in the city, so he moved to the countryside of Lanikai…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • Heart and Memory: An Old Plantation Store Still Serves Community

    Hawi General Store had the town’s first faxing service. photo courtesy of NKCRC

    By Catherine Tarleton The 1930s were boom years for the sugarcane industry. Kohala Sugar Company, a giant consolidation of seven sugar mills in North Kohala (Kohala, Union, Niuli‘i, Hawi, Halawa, Hō‘ea, and Star) employed 600 people, and produced 45,000 tons…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Hawai‘i Island’s Most Prolific Church Builder: Rev. John D. Paris

    Puka‘ana Church was built of stone and coral near the shoreline in South Kona by Rev. John. D. Paris. The Rev. used different materials depending on a church's location, and as with Helani Church, when the congregation moved upland, the mauka church was built of wood. photo by Denise Laitinen

    By Denise Laitinen Dotting the landscape along main highways and backcountry roads, historic churches in West Hawai‘i range from small wooden chapels to impressive stone structures. It may surprise people to learn the same man, the Reverend John D. Paris,…

    By Denise Laitinen
  • The Waiaka Lindsey House: Time Capsule of Waimea History

    The 1942 addition by Edwin Lindsey with gardens in the foreground. The stream flowed down on the right.

    By Jan Wizinowich Nestled at the foot of Kohala Mountain, the Lindsey house is the heart of what was once a historic Waiaka homestead and is a tribute to the memories of many who grew up in Waimea. The abundant…

    By Jan Wizinowich
  • Puna Lights: A Beloved Holiday Tradition

    One of Stanward's Puna Lights displays in 2012. It has since evolved and grown in size. photo courtesy of Puna Lights

    By Denise Laitinen Stanward Oshiro is hard at work making the holidays a little brighter for Hawai‘i Island residents. His annual synchronized Christmas light and music display in lower Puna has become a community favorite for more than a decade,…

    By Denise Laitinen
  • A Bygone Era — Hilo’s Old Courthouse and Police Station

    Hilo Police Station and County Courthouse, circa 1960. photo courtesy of Hilo Police Department, County of Hawai‘i

    By Marcia Timboy If walls could talk, an 86-year-old building in downtown Hilo would have a myriad of stories to tell of a wahi pana (special legendary place). In an area where ruling chiefs governed during the pre-contact era, and…

    By Marcia Timboy
  • Anna Ranch: A Chapter of Waimea History

    By Catherine Tarleton Behind the white rail fence and trellis gate, across the lawn and gardens at the foot of Waimea’s rolling hills, inside the gracious white house with blue-striped awnings on its sunny bay windows, lives a story. Opening…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Hawai’i Island’s Famous “Painted Church”

    By Denise Laitinen An incredible example of American folk art, St. Benedict Catholic Church in Captain Cook is one of the most well-known and colorful churches on Hawai‘i Island. Tucked into the slopes of Mauna Loa among coffee farms above…

    By Denise Laitinen
  • Hale o Ho‘oponopono: Perpetuating the Cultural Legacy of Hōnaunau

    By Gayle Kaleilehua Greco Driving down the single lane road towards the Hōnaunau boat ramp, there is a quietness that envelops you, a glimpse of the ocean, and a curiosity of what happened on this land in the early days…

    By Gayle Kaleilehua Greco
  • Then & Now: Kīlauea Lodge–Warm Up, Freak Out, Chow Down: Friendship, Ghosts, and Gourmet Cuisine

    Hale-O-Aloha, the centerpiece of the Hawai‘i YMCA’s mountain camp.

    By Alan D. McNarie Even from a distance, the fireplace in the dining room of the Kīlauea Lodge and Restaurant in Volcano is an impressive structure. Large memorabilia imbedded in the fireplace matrix grab your gaze: Hawaiian poi pounders, dinosaur…

    By Alan D. McNarie
  • Boone Morrison: Hawai‘i Island’s Leading Restoration Architect

    photo courtesy Kornelius Schorle

    By Alan D. McNarie When I was about 11, my folks were touring the gold rush country,” reminisces Boone Morrison, sitting in the architect’s studio behind his house in Volcano. “We showed up in Sacramento and they were restoring Sutter’s…

    By Alan D. McNarie
  • What Withstands the Test of Time? The Lyman Mission House

    By Le‘a Gleason Imagine sailing for six months, leaving the cool Atlantic Ocean, and passing into the breezy Pacific Ocean to land in a foreign place. The rain soaks the thatched roof of your new home creating an ever-present dampness…

    By Lea Gleason
  • If Walls Could Talk: APAC’s Long History at the Aloha Theatre

    Original painting by Edwin Kayton, kayton-art.com

    By Le‘a Gleason Every town has its theater. That place where people go to escape the confines of reality, get lost in a performance, or lose themselves on stage. To become something or someone else—as if to try on masks—has…

    By Lea Gleason
  • Kona’s Onion House: The Sydney Opera House Meets Stonehenge

    Circa late 1960

    By Barbara Fahs They said it couldn’t be built. Later, they said it couldn’t be repaired. Yet the Onion House stands proudly today in South Kona as a living work of art and innovative architecture. Thanks to the vision of…

    By Barbara Fahs
  • Then & Now: Hilo Sugar Mill/Wainaku Center

    By Denise Laitinen Situated on the sea cliffs just north of Hilo and tucked behind old concrete walls is the former Hilo Sugar Mill, which in its heyday processed 1,400 tons of sugar a day. Now, surrounded by tropical flowers…

    By Denise Laitinen
  • Stepping Back in Time, and into Hilo’s Shipman House

    By Denise Laitinen Stepping into Shipman House Bed and Breakfast on Reed’s Island in Hilo is like stepping into a piece of history. The house reflects a century of Hilo’s history, one filled with grandeur, decline, restoration, and preservation. In…

    By Denise Laitinen
  • Then & Now: Volcano House Reincarnate–Uncovering Old Beauty and Discovering Hawai‘i’s Oldest Hotel Anew

    1907 postcard, HAVO 4857

    By Alan D. McNarie The grand dame of Hawai‘i hotels is back! Volcano House began checking in visitors March 22 for the first time since it closed for structural upgrades and interior renovations on December 31, 2009. On June 1…

    By Alan D. McNarie
  • Vegetable Steel! Miracle Grass!

    By John J. Boyle I awake in the ‘ohana to cooing doves in an octagonal room in the low jungle of Kapoho, smiling about how warmly organic the structure is, how much like a finely worked piece of furniture and…

    By John J. Boyle
  • Volcano Tree House Takes “Green” to a New Level

    Devany Vickery-Davidson Tarzan and Jane never had it so good, nor did the Swiss Family Robinson. Nestled in the branches of several old-growth ‘ohia trees and perched above a lava tube in Volcano on the Big Island of Hawai‘i is…

    By Devany Vickery-Davidson
  • Between a Rock and a Soft Place: Hawai‘i Island Retreat at Ahu Pohaku Ho‘omaluhia

    The Hawai‘i Island Retreat, as the lodge is also known, is a true sanctuary with spa features.

    By Cynthia Sweeney Jeanne Sunderland recalls first being brought to the “gathering place of the stones” by her teacher, Kumu Tommy Sullivan, over 20 years ago. They arrived by canoe and were silent as they explored the land. Like a…

    By Cynthia Sweeney
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