Studio Gang has designed a 41-story residential high rise called Ko’ula that would be a central component within the 60-acre Ward Village master-planned community in Honolulu on the island of Oahu in Hawaii.
The tower will include 565 studio, one-, two-, and three-bedroom residences, each with its own lanai, or veranda. The design of the building—which twists as it rises and undulates to create a succession of different floor plans—recalls the shape of red sugarcane plants that once grew in this area.
The Howard Hughes Corporation is the developer on this tower and Ward Village. The design firm Yabu Pushelberg designed Ko’ula’s interiors, which will showcase natural materials, colors, and textures. The project has yet to name its other Building Team members.
A porte cochiere connects the high rise to an expansive courtyard. Image: The Howard Hughes Corporation
The high rise will connect to a public porch that opens onto an expansive courtyard that will serve as another entry point for Ward Village’s Central Plaza, which began construction earlier this year and whose first phase is expected to open to the public in January. The completed tower will include 58,300 sf of dining and retail spaces, 11,000 sf of open spaces, and 58,496 sf of recreational spaces.
Ko’ula’s residents will have exclusive access to a lobby and dropoff area located a level above the street.
A sales office that the design firm Woods Bagot converted from a 1960s-era office building will start taking purchase orders for Ko’ula’s residences later this year. Ko’ula is scheduled to break ground sometime in 2019, although no specific date has been set. Hughes has not disclosed a completion date nor the project’s anticipated cost.
One of the amenities decks within the Ko'ula high rise, which will offer 565 apartments. Image: The Howard Hughes Corporation
The Ward Village district is located between downtown Honolulu and Waikīkī. As part of the district’s redevelopment, Howard Hughes Corporation last summer topped off a 43-story mixed-use tower called Ke Kilohana, with 424 residential units, 375 of which targeting workforce buyers.
When it’s completed, Ward Village will have 4,500 residences and one million sf of retail space. It is part of Ka’kaako, Honolulu’s commercial and retail district for which the city has laid out ambitious expansion plans that include 30 new buildings.
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Feb 26, 2019
275-unit residential building under construction at 2111 S. Wabash
Solomon Cordwell Buenz is designing the project.
Hotel Facilities | Feb 4, 2019
31-story YotelPAD Miami combines 222 hotel rooms and 231 condominiums
YotelPAD is a new brand by Yotel.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 31, 2019
Student housing series: Designing a home away from home in The Golden State
California asserts building code restrictions more stringently than other states, making design challenging for student housing.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 29, 2019
Here's what $41M will buy you in the OMA-designed Avery tower in SF
A glass-enclosed, full-floor, 8,482-sf penthouse will sit more than 600 feet above San Francisco's Transbay District.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 28, 2019
Luxury townhomes rise on the site of a former office park in Irvine, Calif.
KTGY Architecture + Planning designed the project.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 25, 2019
The country's most expensive home sells for $238 million
The unit comprises four stories at 220 Central Park South in Manhattan.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 22, 2019
Caoba is the first tower to open at Miami Worldcenter
Caoba was co-developed by CIM Group and Falcone Group.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 16, 2019
Micro-units: Good for the city? Good for citizens?
Thinking more holistically about housing typologies and zoning will improve our public realm.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 7, 2019
364-unit multifamily development planned near Lake Lewisville in Texas
BGO Architects is designing the project.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 18, 2018
Redesigning the intergenerational village: Innovative solutions for communities and homes of the future
Social sustainability has become a central concern in terms of its effect that spans generations.