There is in fact a street (and I think a major street, as it has a freeway offramp to it) by this name in Santa Barbara, Ca.
Houston, TX =
Kuykendahl - pronounced KERK-en-dall
San Felipe - San FILL-e-pee
I think with Hawaiian street names, you have to consider the context, so this example really is more exotic than Kalaniana’ole, Likelike, Kahekili, etc.
The streets named after the European and American Caucasians are the ones that stand out to me - Bishop, Dillingham, Isenberg. I always knew where those streets were. God help you try to find a specific street named Ala ____ near Salt Lake – there’s a dozen of them.
Palo Alto has many streets named after famous writers - Emerson, Hawthorne, Poe, Kipling, Cowper and Lytton from a quick look at Google Maps.
I’ve always like Klickitat Street from the Ramona books - which counts because it is a real street in Portland. I made a pilgrimage the first time I visited Portland.
When I lived in Albuquerque, my apartment was on the corner of University and Indian School. I always thought Indian School Road an interesting name, given the history of sending the Indians to those schools.
In Lexington, Ky., “Horse Capital of the World,” we have Man o’ War Blvd., which partially encircles the city. Part of it passes by Hamburg Place, now a sprawling shopping development, formerly a horse farm founded by John E. Madden.
Many of the streets around the development are named for Thoroughbreds bred by the farm, including Sir Barton Way (the first winner of the Triple Crown), Alysheba Way, Princess Doreen Drive, Star Shoot Parkway, Ogden, Old Rosebud, Plaudit Place, and the weirdest as far as street names go, Pink Pigeon Parkway.