Commissioner's Office (Rota)

It is a single-story structure with walls of manposteria (coral, typically mixed with limestone mortar, but in this case probably portland cement), a construction method adopted during the Spanish period.

The window trim consists of ifil lintels, and the building's cornice is Japanese in style.

At the time of the building's listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1981, it was in deteriorated condition, lacking a roof and with one collapsed wall.

The building housed the offices of a local commissioner, or village head responsible to the Japanese authorities.

This article about a property in the Northern Mariana Islands on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.