King Kamehameha Golf Course Clubhouse

King Kamehameha Golf Course Clubhouse

View of the clubhouse from the south
General information
Type House
Location Waikapu, Maui, Hawaii
Coordinates 20°50′26″N 156°31′08″W / 20.840664°N 156.518762°W / 20.840664; -156.518762Coordinates: 20°50′26″N 156°31′08″W / 20.840664°N 156.518762°W / 20.840664; -156.518762
Construction started 1991?
Completed May 1993
Cost $25-35 million (1993 completion)[1][2]
$40 million (2004 overhaul)[2]
Governing body MMK Maui LP
Technical details
Floor area 74,778 sq ft (6,947.1 m2)
Design and construction
Architect John Rattenbury
Adapted by Taliesin Architects from an original design by Frank Lloyd Wright[3]

The King Kamehameha Golf Course Clubhouse, formerly known as the Waikapu Valley Country Club, is a building in Waikapu, Maui, Hawaii. The structure is based on the unbuilt Arthur Miller house (1957) originally conceived by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959). Wright designed the house for Arthur Miller's wife, Marilyn Monroe (1926–1962), but Miller and Monroe divorced soon after and the project was abandoned. The Arthur Miller house design was a modification of two previous unbuilt projects—the Raúl Baillères house (1952) and before it, the Robert F. Windfohr house (1949), also known as the "Crownfield" house.[4]

Wright's work remained in the Taliesin archives for more than two decades until 1988 when Pundy Yokouchi and Howard Hamamoto visited Taliesin Architects in Scottsdale, Arizona, and expressed interest in building a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed golf clubhouse. Architect John Rattenbury combined all three unfinished Wright designs, enlarged them to meet the spatial requirements of a commercial clubhouse, and designed it to fit into the natural landscape of Waikapu's hilly terrain. Construction of the clubhouse was completed in 1993.

Located at an elevation of 750 feet in the foothills of the West Maui Mountains, the clubhouse looks out across the sugarcane-filled valley of Central Maui's isthmus towards the Upcountry slopes of the Haleakalā volcano in the east, with panoramic coastal views of Ma'alaea Bay in the south and Ho‘okipa Bay in the north.[5][6]

History

In February 1949, Robert F. Windfohr and his wife Anne Valliant Burnett Tandy asked architect Frank Lloyd Wright to design a luxury home for them on the prairie of Fort Worth, Texas. Calling it "Crownfield", Wright designed it in a short period of time, and the Windfohr's discussed modifications, but the project never went anywhere.[4]:Fig. 53The Crownfield design was altered in 1952 for Mexican government official Raúl Baillères who planned to build the home in Acapulco, Mexico. Nothing came of the project. Then, in 1957, Marilyn Monroe contacted Wright about building a home for her and her husband Arthur Miller in Roxbury, Connecticut.[7] Wright expanded the original plans for Crownfield, complete with movie theater, pool, and nursery for the children Miller and Monroe planned to have. But the marriage did not last and Wright died shortly after, leaving the unfinished plans archived at Taliesin West.[2]

In 1984, businessman Sandy Sims first contacted the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation in Scottsdale, Arizona, and proposed a Golf course development and subdivision using unbuilt designs from Wright's archives to construct Wright-designed residences on the course.[1] Developers Pundy Yokouchi and Howard Hamamoto contacted Taliesin Architects and requested an original Frank Lloyd Wright design for a golf clubhouse in Waikapu, Maui, Hawaii. Architect John Rattenbury combined all three designs to produce a new structure that fit into the Waikapu landscape.[5]:125 Due to a period of drought on Maui, the second stage of the project involving a subdivision composed of 30 Wright-designed homes was put on hold and was never built.[1][8] Lead developer Takeshi Sekiguchi and builder Hawaiian Dredging Construction Company constructed the clubhouse from concrete and steel, completing the project in 1993.[3][6][9]

Features

The building is split into three levels with two-thirds of the structure underground, with a total area of 74,778 square feet. Copper fascia surrounds the domed roofs of the building which fits into the landscape of the West Maui Mountains behind it and the golf course bunkers in front.[5]:125[10]

The upper level has an area of 20,421 square feet.[11] It includes the lobby, pro shop, meeting rooms, dining room, and kitchen. There are three banquet meeting rooms. The dining room features a 100-foot dome roof with a central 25 foot skylight. At 3,800 sq. feet, the pro shop is the largest in the state of Hawaii.[6] The mid level of the building has an area of 26,741 square feet. The lower level has an area of 27,616 square feet[11] and contains locker rooms for men and women, Japanese baths, golf cart parking and maintenance facilities.

The main stairwell sits beneath a stained glass sky panel based on Wright's original butterfly art glass design over the entrance of the Dana-Thomas House in Springfield, Illinois.[11]

Endemic nene (Branta sandvicensis) geese live on the grounds. Native plants in the area include ʻilima (Sida fallax) and 'akia (Wikstroemia foetida). Common tropical trees and plants on the grounds include plumeria, hibiscus, Cook pine (Araucaria columnaris), monkeypod (Albizia saman), and Bougainvillea.[12]

Ownership

The clubhouse was originally owned by the Waikapu Valley Country Club, and later, the Grand Waikapu Golf Resort and Spa which changed ownership and closed in 1999. During this time, the clubhouse remained open and was used for special events.[6] In 2004, Makoto Kaneko purchased the business for $12.5 million and invested $40 million in restoring the property. It re-opened in 2006 as the King Kamehameha Golf Course Clubhouse.[9][13]

Art collection

The clubhouse contains an extensive collection of artwork honoring the culture of Hawaii, including a painting by Herb Kawainui Kane, featherwork by Jo-Anne Kahanamoku-Sterling, kapa by Puanani Van Dorpe, bronze sculptures by Dale Zarella, and a portrait by Tonia Marks Baney.[6][11]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Rogers, P. D. (November 14, 1991). Wright in Hawaii. The Washington Post, T5. (subscription required)
  2. 1 2 3 Campbell, B. (April 19, 2007). Long, Hard Journey: From the Pen Of Frank Lloyd Wright to Hawaii. The Wall Street Journal. 249 (91), D8.
  3. 1 2 Holmes, K., Watersun, D. (1994). Under A Maui Roof. Maui Publishing Company. ISBN 0-9622212-1-X. p. 94.
  4. 1 2 Pfeiffer, B. B. (1985). Frank Lloyd Wright, Treasures of Taliesin: Seventy-Seven Unbuilt Designs. 1st Ed. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-1235-2. This includes "Crownfield", Robert F. Windfohr House, Fort Worth, Texas, 1949, Plate 54; and Raul Bailleres House, Acapulco, Mexico, 1952, Plate 56.
  5. 1 2 3 Rattenbury, J. (2000). A Living Architecture: Frank Lloyd Wright and Taliesin Architects. Pomegranate. ISBN 0-7649-1366-2. pp. 125-127.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Tsutsumi, C. C. (July 3, 2006a) Dream House. Honolulu Star-Bulletin, D1.
  7. Johnson, D. L. (2005). The Fountainheads: Wright, Rand, the FBI and Hollywood. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1958-X. pp. 164-166. Footnote 35 on page 205 mistakenly confuses the Architectural Record source about Maui with the publication Progressive Architecture.
  8. Ross, N. L. (February 7, 1991). The Wright Standard. The Washington Post. (subscription required)
  9. 1 2 Ginella, M., Loof, T. (November 2008). When Frank Lloyd Wright Met Marilyn Monroe. Golf Digest. 59 (11), 124. ISSN 0017-176X
  10. Nesco Manufacturing, Inc., 2007.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Clubhouse Guide. The King Kamehameha Golf Club. Wailuku, Hawaii.
  12. Tsutsumi, C. C. (November 16, 2006b) Hawaiian culture, history linked at Maui golf oasis. The Boston Herald.(subscription required)
  13. "Maui course tees it up for the wealthy" Pacific Business News, 2005

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External links

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