Hawaii Shingon Mission

915 Sheridan St., Honolulu, Hawaii. County/parish: Honolulu.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places April 26, 2002. NRIS 02000386.

1 contributing building. 1 contributing object.

Also known as:

  • TMK: 2-3-018:004

From Wikipedia:

Hawaii Shingon Mission

Hawaii Shingon Mission or Shingon Shu Hawaii (Japanese: 真言宗ハワイ別院, Shingonshu Hawai Betsuin, formerly the Shingon Sect Mission of Hawaii) located at 915 Sheridan Street in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi is one of the most elaborate displays of Japanese Buddhist temple architecture in Hawaiʻi. It was first built in 1915-1918 by Nakagawa Katsutaro, a master builder of Japanese-style temples, then renovated in 1929 by Hego Fuchino, a self-taught man who was the first person of Japanese ancestry to become a licensed architect in the Islands. The building underwent further changes in 1978, and was considerably augmented in 1992. However, its most distinctive features remain: the steep, hipped-gable roof (irimoya) with rounded-gable projection, both with elaborate carvings on the ends, and the glittering altar and interior furnishings from Japan that signify its ties to esoteric Shingon Buddhism.

The temple was added to the National Register of Historic Places on 26 April 2002.

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National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/63815900

LC