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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Yamase Building at the corner of Moana Road and Kaumuali i Highway in Waimea, Kaua i, was built around 1921 by an itinerant Japanese temple architect for Seiichi Yamase, a nisei son of Japanese immigrants. Despite being the only structure of its kind in Hawai i, it well represents both commercial architecture in rural Hawaii and the contribution of immigrants to the growth of commerce there. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. Corner buildings with curved facades are rare, but not unknown in Hawaii. However, most of…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Yamase Building at the corner of Moana Road and Kaumuali i Highway in Waimea, Kaua i, was built around 1921 by an itinerant Japanese temple architect for Seiichi Yamase, a nisei son of Japanese immigrants. Despite being the only structure of its kind in Hawai i, it well represents both commercial architecture in rural Hawaii and the contribution of immigrants to the growth of commerce there. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. Corner buildings with curved facades are rare, but not unknown in Hawaii. However, most of them are masonry, not wood frame constructions, and no other such curved corner sits beneath a cantilevered, rectangular, Japanese-style (irimoya) hip and gable roof. The cantilevered, wrap-around balcony on the upper floor follows the curve of the walls beneath, serving the same function as the verandah walkways around traditional Japanese homes. The upper-story doors are also paned sliding doors, like Japanese sh ji. Upper-story balconies were typical of many small family-owned shops, where the family lived above the shop.