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University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa

Collaborating on a campus-wide initiative to integrate traditional Polynesian navigation

Timeline
2020
2023
present
Sector
Institutions of Learning
Service
Wayfinding
Strategy
Buildings
Bilger Hall, Life Sciences
Location
Honolulu, HI

UH Mānoa is the oldest and largest university in the University of Hawai‘i system. As a Native Hawaiian Place of Learning, the campus strengthens Native Hawaiian knowledge and cultural values by integrating early Polynesian navigation practices into their campus wayfinding and signage system. First conceived by students in the Architecture department, the bilingual signage project turned into an administration-backed initiative to implement kānaka ʻōiwi (Native Hawaiian) navigational knowledge and values across the 320-acre campus.

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UH Manoa’s signage project centers traditional Polynesian navigation techniques and kānaka ʻōiwi alignment practices. Traditionally, the islands were structured into ahupuaʻa (land division usually extending from the mountains to the sea) which were made up of subdivisions called ʻili ʻāina. The signs demarcate on which ‘ili ‘āina buildings are located, are placed according to where ancient kānaka ʻōiwi erected heiau (temples), and point toward different landmarks in and around Mānoa. They also feature medallions that include a QR code that’s synced with an interactive map accessible by smartphone to understand the surrounding land.

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kānaka ʻōiwi DESIGNS first. wayfinding expertise second.

Our longtime collaborators and kānaka ʻōiwi designers and cultural practitioners Sig and Kūhaʻo Zane and Nalani Kanakaʻole were commissioned to create the cultural concept and unique watermark for the signage. The three tapped us to lend our wayfinding and fabrication expertise on the tactical elements of execution like contracting fabricators and ensuring the signs contained all of the necessary wayfinding components. Our mission was to lend our resources and knowledge as needed so the Hawaiian way of navigation could take precedence.

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The project’s global recognition
In 2023, UH Mānoa’s bilingual signage received the prestigious “World Changing Ideas Award” in the Art & Design category from Fast Company. It called the signage system “an elegant tribute to the legacy of the once sovereign nation,” noting that it serves as “the first wayfinding system to include an Indigenous language at a U.S. university.” The project exemplifies our commitment to broadening the wayfinding profession to include multicultural approaches to navigation. The project has also gone on to be awarded the Honor Award in the 2023 SEGD Global Design Awards for the University of Hawai'i and Sig Zane Kaiao.
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Project

Collaborating on a campus-wide initiative to integrate traditional Polynesian navigation

UH Mānoa is the oldest and largest university in the University of Hawai‘i system. As a Native Hawaiian Place of Learning, the campus strengthens Native Hawaiian knowledge and cultural values by integrating early Polynesian navigation practices into their campus wayfinding and signage system. First conceived by students in the Architecture department, the bilingual signage project turned into an administration-backed initiative to implement kānaka ʻōiwi (Native Hawaiian) navigational knowledge and values across the 320-acre campus.

Timeline
2020
2023
present
Sector
Institutions of Learning
Service
Wayfinding
Strategy
Buildings
Bilger Hall, Life Sciences
Location
Honolulu, HI