Built in 1930, it is relatively rare as a pre-World War II house with ifil wood construction.
The roof is framed in non-ifil wood and covered in corrugated metal.
Its colonial-era architecture is exemplified by exterior stairs and porch elements.
The house is notable for surviving not just World War II, but also termite infestations and typhoons that have regularly devastated the island.
This article about a property in Guam on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.