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(5) A streetscape rendering of the project site and adjacent properties suitable for <br /> evaluating the immediate spatial relationships. Photographic images may be <br /> substituted where they able to serve the same purpose; <br /> (6) Other descriptive information as the director or the PDRC finds necessary to <br /> determine consistency of the proposed project with the design and architectural <br /> guidelines adopted for the special district in which the project building site is <br /> located. <br /> Existing Character <br /> Most of Pdhoa's older commercial and residential buildings are characterized as <br /> "plantation style" and are typical of buildings commonly seen in small towns and villages <br /> throughout Hawaii. Vernacular plantation-style building features vary, but generally <br /> share the following characteristics: <br /> • Building height: usually two stories in height, or some one-story structures with <br /> false-fronts nearly as high as two-story buildings. <br /> • Setback: no setback from property lines and the sidewalk. <br /> • Roof form: gable, shed, or flat roof, often behind a false front. <br /> • Roof materials: typically corrugated metal, sometimes tarpaper; later composition <br /> shingles were used. <br /> • Walls: single-wall construction primarily of vertical tongue-and-groove board, <br /> board and batten or horizontal boards. <br /> • Storefront: Small, irregular and varied. <br /> • Entries: Often flush with the front wall, occasionally recessed to provide shade <br /> and shelter for pedestrians. <br /> • Doors: Wood and wood-with-glass doors featuring multiple panels, raised panels, <br /> or glazing and panels. <br /> • Windows: Multiple-light and wood framed, with wood sashes and mullions, <br /> double-hung windows double hung windows featuring transoms. <br /> Character defining features of plantation-style commercial architecture: <br /> False front facade: Hawai`i's plantation-style commercial architecture typically featured <br /> a false front because building materials were quite expensive in relation to the labor <br /> costs. Architectural ornamentation was often limited to the building's facade and resulted <br /> in numerous variations of the false front. <br /> Canopy: Canopies across the main facade are a character-defining feature in plantation <br /> style commercial structures. Most canopies were shed roofs covered with corrugated <br /> metal. A few of Pdhoa's canopies were hipped with shingles. Most canopies were <br /> supported by brackets underneath and/or rods above; posts were sometimes used to <br /> support canopies in turn-of-the-century structures. Historically, some of Pdhoa's two- <br /> story edifices had wood-framed balconies, which also functioned as canopies. Canopies <br /> and balconies provide the shade and weather protection important in a pedestrian-friendly <br /> 6 1 P a g e <br />