James L. Coke House
The James L. Coke House, also called Waipuna ('springwater' in the Hawaiian language), at 3649 Nuʻuanu Pali Drive in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi was built in 1934 for Judge James L. Coke, who had that year been reappointed Chief Justice of the Hawaii Supreme Court by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Its architecture is significant as an example of the residential work of C.W. Dickey, the most prominent local architect of the period, and its landscaping represents the work of the preeminent landscape architect of the period, Richard Tongg. The house and grounds were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
primaryTopic
James L. Coke House
The James L. Coke House, also called Waipuna ('springwater' in the Hawaiian language), at 3649 Nuʻuanu Pali Drive in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi was built in 1934 for Judge James L. Coke, who had that year been reappointed Chief Justice of the Hawaii Supreme Court by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Its architecture is significant as an example of the residential work of C.W. Dickey, the most prominent local architect of the period, and its landscaping represents the work of the preeminent landscape architect of the period, Richard Tongg. The house and grounds were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
has abstract
The James L. Coke House, also ...... onolulu International Airport.
@en
added
1986-08-20
architect
area (m2)
2.42811385344e+3
location
NRHP Reference Number
Wikipage page ID
24,006,382
Wikipage revision ID
735,706,976
year of construction
Caption
coord display
governing body
lat degrees
lat direction
lat minutes
lat seconds
locmapin
long degrees
long direction
long minutes
long seconds
subject
point
21.343611111111112 -157.82888888888888
comment
The James L. Coke House, also ...... er of Historic Places in 1986.
@en
label
James L. Coke House
@en
lat
2.1343611111111112e+1
long
-1.5782888888888889e+2
wasDerivedFrom
depiction
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
James L. Coke House
@en