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nā moʻo

YESTERDAY
TODAY

TOMORROW

With every new project, WCIT approaches design individually as we seek to explore each project’s unique opportunities and possibilities. Research is an important first step in this process. A thorough investigation in the past and present conditions (yesterday and today) will provide the basis for which we will begin to formulate our master plan and design proposals (tomorrow).

Storytelling is an integral aspect of our design approach. Through the environments we create, built or in landscapes, we strive to achieve an inspired, coherent plan that subtly yet effectively conveys the story of the place, its people and their culture. Our design approach to this effort will look to discover an uniquely appropriate solution that combines a proper and dutiful respect of its setting, explores necessary historical and cultural inspirations, incorporates indigenous and global sustainable strategies in meaningful and interactive ways, and has community at its core through the creation of a series of vibrant spaces and places for activity and interaction.

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artwork by solomon enos.

Moʻo Methodology

Acknowledging our connection to the past, grounding us in the present
and guiding our future.

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mo‘okūauhau

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mo‘olelo

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mo‘oka‘i

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mo‘owaiwai

artwork by native hawaiian artist solomon enos.

NĀNĀ I MUA, NĀNĀ I HOPE

LOOKING FORWARD, LOOKING BACK

A native Hawaiian born and raised in Hilo, Rob continues to discover and embrace the depths and traditions of the island’s heritage. He is a respected advocate and creative interpreter of culture, most notably that of the host Hawaiian culture, but also that of the diverse ethnicities of Hawaii. Through this appreciation and passion for culture and a keen understanding of the nuances of local sensibilities, Rob has developed into one of the most sought-after designers in the islands and one of the leading and most successful planning and entitlement professionals in Hawaii.

 

Through this skill set, Rob demonstrates a unique ability to plan, design, and implement sophisticated and complex development proposals and sustainable strategies – proposals and strategies that strive to create uniquely special places and environments that are rooted in the Hawaiian way of life. 

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Hale 'Ōlelo  |  UH Hilo College of Hawaiian Language

KEʻELIKО̄LANI

August 1881, a small, short-lived eruption at Mauna Loa’s summit heralded the beginning of an eruptive sequence that was to be followed six months later by the voluminous flank eruption which would soon threaten the then-small town of Hilo. The people asked Princess Ruth Keʻelikōlani to intercede. The Hawaiian-language newspaper Ko Hawai‘i Pae Aina published a letter with the heading “Ka Pele ai Honua ma Hilo” (Pele, devourer of land at Hilo) that describes the immediate danger, “Hapalua Mile ka Mamao mai ke Koana aku” (the distance from town being only one half mile.) Keʻelikōlani offered traditional oli (chants) and hoʻokupu (tribute) to Pele and later reportedly camped at the foot of the flow. She approached the flow somewhere within what is now the Alenaio gulch, chanted and made her offering, to stop the flow and save Hilo town from burning. The flow stopped.

artwork by solomon enos.

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