Hawaiian C-Store Helps Customers Feel at Home

For more than 100 years, customers have considered the Kimura General Store their home away from home.

December 15, 2025

On the Big Island of Hawaii in the historic town of Papaikou, the Kimura General Store has been welcoming visitors and locals alike for more than a century. “We take great pride in being one of the last mom-and-pop general stores on all of the islands,” said Naomi Muronaka, store manager. “The store has been the hub of the community, providing snacks, drinks and general wares, plus space to meet and greet others.”

On October 18, 1921, Tsukumo and Ume Hironaka opened the T. Hironaka Store, the first iteration of the store that at the time was a sugar plantation shop. Their store sold American and Japanese grocery items, produce, animal feed, Japanese medicinal products and other general merchandise until 1960, when the Morigaki family took over running the store.

Then in 1989, Colleen Aina, the Hironaka’s granddaughter, reinvented the store as Pinky’s 5 Eight, which became a landmark in the community for the next 25 years. Pinky’s offered manapua (a Hawaiian adaptation of the Chinese barbecue pork bun), pork hash, collectable cards and fireworks. In 2014, Aina retired and closed Pinky’s.

The store remained shuttered until Mariner and Theresa Revell purchased the business in June 2021, reopening as Kimura General Store in August 2022 with many of the same products, including manapua, hot dogs, made-to-order hot foods, musubi (a rice and Spam snack), beverages, snacks and fishing supplies.

“The area is an old plantation community with generations of people still living here, so it’s very family and community oriented,” Muronaka said. Many of the employees live within minutes of the store. “So we’re not just workers—we’re members of the community as well, so we know how important the store is to everyone.”

That local knowledge meant the Revells and Muronaka knew what traditions to continue at Kimura General Store, such as Pinky’s selling fireworks during the last week of the year. “Fireworks at the new year are pretty big here in Hawaii, so we decided to honor that Pinky’s tradition and stock fireworks so locals had a convenient location to get [them] to celebrate the coming year,” Muronaka said.

While honoring its history with nods to the past, Kimura General Store also keeps up with current trends too. “We like to bring in new things, exotic snacks from Japan, Sweden, Dubai and China to stay on trend,” Muronaka said. The store’s Gen Z employees assist with deciding what popular items might be good to stock.

Continue reading “Feeling at Home at Kimura General Store” in the December 2025 issue of NACS Magazine. And check out the 2025 catalogue of NACS Ideas 2 Go videos featuring hundreds of interviews with convenience retailers in nearly every U.S. state and multiple countries.