
Today Waikīkī is where the world learns to surf. The royal sport the aliʻi rode here became a global one through Duke Kahanamoku, the Kālia boy turned Olympic champion, whose bronze statue now stands on the sand with arms spread wide in welcome. Outrigger canoes still launch through the breakers, hula and music drift from the beachfront, and beneath the towers the old name endures — Waikīkī, the spouting waters, a royal shore that taught the world to ride the waves. Our designs carry that older, deeper name with pride.
That name tells you what this place once was. Waikīkī, “spouting water,” was named for the springs and streams that gushed from the Koʻolau valleys — Makiki, Mānoa, and Pālolo — and spread across a broad coastal plain. The old ahupuaʻa, or land division, of Waikīkī was vast, reaching from Kou, the future Honolulu, toward Maunalua at the island's east end. Where high-rises now stand was once some two thousand acres of marsh and wetland, fed by mountain water and framed, then as now, by the crater of Lēʻahi — Diamond Head — at the end of the beach.
Why People Visit Waikīkī
Waikīkī offers a whole world in two miles of sand: the birthplace of modern surfing, royal history beneath the hotels, Diamond Head at the end of the beach, and the easy warmth of Hawaiian hospitality. It is the most famous beach in the Pacific — and for the surfers, paddlers, and families who live and gather here, simply home.