Tiki Central / Locating Tiki
Fiji Island, Roanoke, VA (restaurant)
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JD
Johnny Dollar
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Thu, Jul 8, 2004 1:07 PM
Name: Fiji Island http://www.fijiislandroanoke.com/ Description: opened in 1972 (or before?), currently owned by Charles Chang, originially of Taiwan. it appears that the venue is kept going by a music club in the basement: http://www.theclubatfiji.com/MainPage.htm [ Edited by: Johnny Dollar 2011-10-27 06:08 ] |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Sat, Oct 2, 2004 2:37 PM
As promised, we made it to Fiji Island en route [from instead of] to Hukilau 2004. All in all, my vague recollections of the place were met by a better experience than I had remembered. Fiji Island sits up off the main commercial strip (Franklin), and the view from the road is mainly of the roadside architecture of this sign. The building’s entrance presents the aspect of having perhaps been a straight-up chinese restaurant that might have been tikified at a later date. We cannot verify or deny this. The building both inside and out has this chinese/tiki hybrid feeling. It pretty much works… All tikis are painted in Disney-esque style, probably not unlike those as originally at the Honolulu in Alexandria, Virginia. Details of the entrance and door tikis. The lobby presents these views straight on, and the “Tiki Room” sign to the left. The masks are clearly less Polynesian than “other,” but the bamboo and fake waterfall work together with all the parts. Sadly the mask on the maitre’d stand no longer had the backlit red lightbulb as I originally recalled. These pictures don’t do entire justice to the interior. The low lighting doesn’t draw attention to the ceiling tiles, which aren’t so blazingly white until you take a flash photo :wink: All the exterior walls are painted black instead of matting, and there is a preponderance of chinese red on woodwork, but again the low light levels worked with it. There were quite a few backlit murals, some of cartoonish tikis like on the menu, and another of a abstract dragon/countryside. The soundtrack sounded like the same exotica soundtrack as at the Honolulu. It was loud enough to get the proper vibe – but be warned, toward the end of our stay the music venue in the basement started creating some less than exotic sounds. The drinks are served in either the relatively vintage (i.e. not modern made in china version) “grasshopper” mug (no markings), bamboo mugs, and I saw white wahine mugs and “ipo bowls” behind the bar but did not see any service with those. Several of the drinks came in large glass bowls. The quality of the drinks was okay, not terribly strong but the Mai Tai was a close cousin to the Honolulu Mai Tai, and the Fogcutter was pretty dead on if not a tad sweeter. The garnishes were about average, but hey, they were there. Each folded napkin placesetting had a plastic lei (whee!). The Pu-Pu “Plate” was sufficiently blazing and the Pu-Pus were about average to good, with the beef sates being the best of the selections. Waikiki Kitty and I split the Crispy Duck that was really good and brought a tear to our eyes in its recollection of the Honolulu crispy duck. SADLY, although bananas flambé was on the menu, they did not have the proper ingredients!!! We were very disappointed about that. When we return I swear we will call with reservations and a request that they have bananas in the kitchen. To sum it up, we found the Fiji Island to be a close cousin to the Honolulu. That would be the not quite so pretty or graceful cousin, but a strong family resemblance :) The size was about three times that of the Honolulu, and its presence in a rather remote town probably owes to its continued existence. The locals love it, and in speaking to some original customers, found that it is more than three decades old, and at one time had a sister restaurant in Charlottesville, Virginia at the Holiday Inn. Our waiter and the visible staff were all asian (-americans?) and professed no knowledge of Tiki Road Trip or any self-aware tiki culture. Out waiter appeared pleased with the notion that someone might travel from out of town to visit the place :). The food was decent, the drinks not so expertly mixologized as from a former Trader Vic’s bartender (go figure), but the tiki décor (except for the red phallic tikis - ?) and soundtrack appear from the same era as the Honolulu. We don’t expect droves of people to travel for hours to visit Fiji Island, but we found it to be a fascinating bit of urban archaeology, and would visit it regularly if it did not require five-plus hours of driving to get to it… Speaking of travel and accommodations, as an added attraction, a period-appropriate “Motor Lodge” is down the hill and across the street from the Fiji Island. We dug on the pink sinks, commode and bathtub. It was a fun addendum to the experience, so we thought we’d include it. Aloha! [ Edited by: Johnny Dollar 2010-01-30 12:41 ] |
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WillTiki
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Tue, Oct 5, 2004 3:12 PM
First of all, just so ya know J$, WillTiki here is the same person as Will on the MDDCtiki forum. |
PPB
polynesian posh boy
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Thu, Oct 14, 2004 1:34 PM
Wow! Time to pull out the tiki magnifying glass. C'ville is my hometown and I didn't know there was a tiki bar. The closest reminents I could find was "Ming Dynasty" It was formally "That Steak Place" in the 70's and even today it has the bordello red velvet wallpaper. There is a tiny bar in it and the bar has some tiki mugs but that is it. You can't drink in the bar; it simply stands as "Ode to Tiki" So I thought the trip was over but then I found out The Cavalier Inn had a tiki bar in the 70's. By the way the Holiday Inn turned its restaurant into a Red Lobster and now it is Days Inn. The old Days Inn is the new Holiday Inn. Welcome to my confusing town but no tiki in it today. |
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Dustycajun
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Sat, Jan 30, 2010 9:50 AM
I had come across these images of the matchbook and menu from Fiji Island and had originally assumed they were from the the Fiji Island in Maumee, Ohio. After figuring out that the matchbook was the same design as the ones from the South Pacific Restaurants located in Arlington, Virginia and Silver Springs, Maryland its pretty clear that they are from the Fiji Island in Roanoke. I wonder if they were originally owned by the same family. Here are some current photos from the restaurant website. Anybody been lately? DC |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Sat, Jan 30, 2010 12:46 PM
damn dustyc! you compelled me to dig back into the memory banks. have not been there since 2004 (6 years! damnnnn) but i reposted the photos we took when we visited there last (see above). good call on the SP / FI connection! fascinating web of history we uncover, the more we dig! j$ |
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Dustycajun
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Sat, Jan 30, 2010 12:56 PM
J$, Thanks for re posting your old photos, I was bummed to see all of the red Xs when I opened the thread, those are great. You need to get a search party organized and take a trip to see how the place is holding up. South Pacific = Fiji Island. Tiki Transmission Tradition! DC |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Sat, Feb 6, 2010 4:50 AM
ok i contacted willtiki who had made that comment above about the charlottesville tiki establishment. he does not have a name for the place as of yet, but here is what we do know: the polynesian / chinese restaurant was next to, and loosely associated with the white house motel on route 250 in charlottesville. the restaurant was between the white house motel and the town and country motor lodge. the motels and restaurant buildings are no longer there - that commercial strip has become infested with car dealerships. their addresses were white house motel town and country motor lodge so... i guess we can say, "they paved the air-conditioned paradise, and put up a parking lot." other snippets of info are:
a bit more research turned this up... http://www.readthehook.com/stories/2004/04/15/COVERmoderne3.2.html the aloha restaurant is now a kia dealership - the building is ca. 1955-1956, designed by architect stanislaw makielski. [ Edited by: Johnny Dollar 2010-02-06 05:31 ] |
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ChefMike
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Sat, Feb 6, 2010 8:19 AM
[ Edited by: ChefMike 2010-02-06 08:28 ] |
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ChefMike
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Sat, Feb 6, 2010 2:59 PM
I think this may be it...just a phone number though |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Sun, Feb 7, 2010 6:09 AM
yeah, chefmike, that's definitely the location... i have put a message into the architectural historian in that link above to see what she might know about the establishment. |
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WyrdNet
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Sun, Mar 7, 2010 6:34 AM
The Aloha Restaurant in Charlotteville was the first place I discovered Tiki. I took a date there in about 1981, and when I graduated from UVA in 1982, my whole family went there to celebrate. This was a large, clean restaurant with a fair amount of bamboo and thatch, but not over the top. Lots of tiki touches, typically Americanized Chinese food that I remember as being very good, and great drinks. The only drink I remember the taste of was the scorpion, still one of my favorites. Although it's hard for me to compare with such an early experience, Aloha set the standard for me. Later in the 80s, I visited Hawaii Kai in NYC, and in the 90s, Mai Kai in Ft. Lauderdale, Trader Vic's in Hollywood, Honolulu in Alexandria, VA, and Kahiki Supper Club in Columbus. And many more after that, from Honolulu to Koblenz. (I'll have to post links to my essays... I'm new to this site. I had some entries in Tiki Road Trip too.) Between the highs and lows, Aloha holds its own, and I don't think I would be alone in that opinion. I don't think I have any pictures from there, I'll post a photo of a matchbook when I get a chance. |
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WyrdNet
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Sun, Mar 7, 2010 6:40 AM
Crap, there's a tiki restaurant in Roanoke?!! I was just there LAST WEEK, and would have made the pilgrimage had I BUTT KNOWN. Won't be back until next year, if Pele doesn't strike me down first for the sleight. |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Sun, Mar 7, 2010 8:11 AM
that would be kick ass, wyrdnet! thanks for filling in more history! :) |
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WyrdNet
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Sun, Mar 7, 2010 8:15 PM
Here is my souvenir of the Aloha Restaurant, a matchbook. Front, back, and inside shown. Compare location shown on map with other research in thread above. Note that the book has a shiny silver finish, almost like chrome. [ Edited by: WyrdNet 2010-03-07 20:19 ] |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Mon, Mar 8, 2010 6:46 AM
in this quasi-jeffersonian building, right? wild! only in charlottesville... tiki and jeffersonian modernism... :) |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Mon, Mar 8, 2010 10:03 AM
excellent... i started a thread of its own for the aloha... here. hope you all don't mind if i port the relevant info over to it. http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?topic=35784&forum=2&0 |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Thu, Oct 27, 2011 6:07 AM
fiji island is still going strong... even got some love locally, with an invokation of trader vic. http://www.roanoke.com/food/reviews/wb/277208
so add to its history: opened in 1972 (or before?), currently owned by Charles Chang originially of Taiwan. |
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HotLava
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Sat, Nov 19, 2011 2:06 PM
I plan on visiting Fiji Island in December (around Christmas). Anyone in town or local want to join me? I spent 25+ years in VA growing up oblivious to tiki, etc. I can't wait to immerse myself in hillbilly tiki (hey I'm from here ....I've earned the right). Lava [ Edited by: HotLava 2011-11-19 14:09 ] |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Fri, Dec 2, 2011 8:25 AM
enjoy! take pictures! |
Pages: 1 19 replies