It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.
[1] It is a 117-by-67-foot (36 m × 20 m) building, the last stone building built by the Kilauea Sugar Company, built of field stone up to its lower gable level, that was a replacement for a previous wood building.
[2] It is deemed significant as an example of masonry construction in Kilauea, usually used for domestic architecture, here adapted for a commercial building.
It was originally open from 2am to 5am, operated by workers who then went to work in the plantation fields.
This article about a property in Hawaii on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.