| Liljestrand House | |
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| U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
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View from driveway side (upslope)
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| Nearest city: | Honolulu, Hawaii |
| Coordinates: | 21°25′19″N 157°50′18″W / 21.42194°N 157.83833°WCoordinates: 21°25′19″N 157°50′18″W / 21.42194°N 157.83833°W |
| Built/Founded: | 1952 |
| Architect: | Vladimir Ossipoff |
| Architectural style(s): | Hawaiian Modern |
| Governing body: | Private |
| Added to NRHP: | 26 March 2008 |
| NRHP Reference#: | 08000207[1] |
The Liljestrand House at 3300 Tantalus Drive in Honolulu, Hawaii, was designed by Vladimir Ossipoff for Betty and Howard Liljestrand, a doctor and nurse who had bought the hillside site overlooking leeward Oahu in 1948. Completed in 1952, the house "was perhaps Ossipoff's most intricate as well as his most widely publicized domestic commission."[2] After it was featured in House Beautiful magazine as a Pace Setter House in 1958, it attracted hundreds of visitors in organized weekly tours.[3] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.[1]
Howard Liljestrand was the son of missionaries to Sichuan, China, where he had been raised. After completing medical degrees in the United States, he and Betty arrived in Hawaiʻi in 1937 en route to China. However, the chaos that followed the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War earlier that year convinced them to pause in Honolulu, where both found employment at The Queen’s Medical Center. Eventually they decided to settle in the Islands, build a home, and raise a family.[4]
It took the Liljestrands until 1946 to find the perfect spot: on a secluded hillside, but within easy reach of work, school, and town. Howard had enjoyed youthful summers in China at a mountain retreat, and he and Betty often roamed the wooded ridge christened Tantalus by Punahou School students. Other prime hillside communities near town were already crowded, but Tantalus was still sparsely settled forest reserve land, lacking city water lines, and the few lots available were not very expensive. During one of their hikes in 1946, the Howard and Betty found the perfect spot—along with its elderly owner enjoying the view. After they became better acquainted, Mr. Coulter offered to sell them the parcel of land for $2000, even though they offered him twice the price.[4]
![]() Front entrance, with Madge Tennent painting inside and Jean Charlot murals framed outside |
![]() Living room, facing front entrance |
![]() Stairway up to living room |
![]() Downstairs, facing pavilion (open-sided recreation room) |
![]() Makai (lower) elevation, from lawn |
![]() View over pool, with Diamond Head in distance |
![]() View from far below |
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