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Design Dilemma: Hawaiian Nighclub
Here is a real dilemma for a designer. I was contacted by Kristen, the manager of Thirty Nine Hotel, an art gallery/nightclub located in Honolulu, Hawaii. The nightclub is one of the first clubs to open in an area that had seen better days, but is now enjoying a renaissance.
Kristen had a specific problem. Accessing the club requires climbing 32 steps. You enter the front door and start hiking. Was there some way I could visually shorten the hike, or simply improve the stair-climbing experience? Kristen told me they’d budgeted $8,000 to $10,000 for the stairs. What could I come up with?
My first thought was, “Yikes!” There were so many issues, the first of which was the fact that those stairs no longer meet code. Any modern staircase requires a landing after a certain number of stairs (usually 13). This gives people a little rest as they climb. It also breaks their fall if they slip. They’ll stop plummeting after 13 steps instead of 32. Since the building wasn’t new, they were able to bypass those codes. But slippage would still be an issue.
Second issue - I couldn’t do anything that would decrease the width of the stairs, basically for the same reason. People need to walk up and down those same stairs. Since they’re only 38 inches wide, I needed every inch of space. That ruled out any wall treatments that had any thickness to them.
I also needed to do something with the steps themselves, as the concrete stairs were chipped and cracked.
The lighting was insufficient.
Finally, the owner liked red. Well, at least that wouldn’t be a problem for me. Red is my fave.
Here’s what I came up with.
The colorways are red and blue. The walls are painted white (to blend with the club) with either a red or blue “arrow.” Why? Read on.
Because of all the constraints, I decided to focus most of the fun on the ceiling using one of my favorite secret weapons - lighting. (Thank GOD for whoever invented LEDs. They’re a little expensive, but are so versatile, emit little heat, and best of all, last 8 years.)
Okay, so what am I lighting? I came up with 2 versions of the same, basic idea, which called for suspending panels of an eco-friendly product called 3-Form and back-lighting it with the LEDs. 3-Form comes in 4′ x 8′ panels in varying thicknesses and about a zillion styles. These can be combined with colors to create just about anything.
The first option was to hang straight panels that follow the square edges of the ceiling. I specified a red 3-Form embedded with a metal cutout. Back-lighting the red with a yellow LED creates a brilliant, eye-popping effect. Very bold. During the day, with more daylight, the effect is beautiful but more in keeping with an art gallery.
The second option was to bend panels of Dyptic 3-Form. This product changes color as it’s bent. Backlighting with white LEDs would be less eye-popping, but really fun and hip and cool. Maybe a little more island-like. I wasn’t able to fly to Hawaii to look at the space, which is why I came up with two ideas.
So how does it look? The world may never know. The owner decided to postpone the $70,000 renovations. Ah well, this happens all too often in my world. But it was a fun project to work on. And maybe one day the owner will come to her senses and bring my vision to life.
5 Responses to “Design Dilemma: Hawaiian Nighclub”
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Posted by Jennifer at Design Hole on February 28th, 2008 at 1:59 pm
Yeah, this was a toughie due to the code issues. I wonder if that’s why they decided to do nothing? Because once the inspector starts looking at one thing, s/he can put the brakes on a lot of other things.
For example, the club only has one means of egress - down those 32 steps. I have no idea how they got permission for a nightclub with that situation.
But it was really fun because of the constraints. I had to think harder to come up with a solution.
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Posted by bronxelf on February 28th, 2008 at 8:51 pm
My guess is that this is why they’re not doing anything with the whole club. I don’t know what the regulations are in Hawaii (though as always they’re probably easier than they are here in NYC), but there’s no way they’d get approval for a club with only one means of egress, period. Also I wonder if Hawaii has a similar thing to here- if you do a substantial renovation (over 30% of the total space), you are required to bring the *whole* space to code. Depending on the square footage of the place, even doing the stairs might push them over the line. At that point they have a real problem, because they have to get a second means of egress in there, widen the stairs as well as change their configuration to code/ADA *and then* fix the entire interior to meed both code and ADA requirements.
To be honest, at that point if they’re not going to buy the whole building the club sits in and just gut it, it’s cheaper to move.
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Posted by Jennifer at Design Hole on February 28th, 2008 at 9:27 pm
Amen to that. And thank you for such a great comment.
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Posted by Anonymous on March 3rd, 2008 at 3:04 pm
Thanks for sharing that, Jennifer. I’m glad there was value in it for you. If/when we revisit renovation plans, I will be in touch. :)












Whether they build it or not, it’s a really good idea, and I think it’s viable so long as you could get it past code. I also like that Dyptic 3-form, and can think of a lot of interesting uses for it. Nice work. :)