Forbes House of the Week: Big Island Breakaway


ESSENTIALS

Firm Name: Craig Steely Architecture

Principal: Craig Steely

Headquarters: 8 Beaver St., San Francisco, CA

Accolades: Forbes Architecture’s “America’s Top 200 Residential Architects,” 2025; Forbes Architecture’s “America’s Best-in-State Residential Architects,” 2025.

House Name: Musubi House

Location: Paauilo, Hawai‘i

Site Specifics: On the Big Island’s northeast slope of Mauna Kea, 4 miles upcountry, 100 acres of seasonal creeks, grassland and Ohi‘a forest overlooking the Pacific Ocean

Area & Layout: 2,200 square feet, 2BR, 2BA


“I’m not looking for a following. I’m looking for an interchange of ideas with people who are also speculating, trying things, and are curious.”

—Frank O. Gehry (1929–2025), Architect


Amid the media saturation of an ever-growing roster of Big Tech-titan land acquisitions and architectural exploits in the Hawaiian Islands (read: Dell, Zuckerberg, Ellison, Benioff and Intel’s Gordon Moore), the dominant image of the Hawaiian house of today suggests a subtropical version of Gilded Age Newport. Construction costs of some of these notably part-time residences land near $100 million. On sites so vast there could be no possibility of neighboring locals (most of whom choose to live in modest but charming corrugated-metal-roof huts) peering over one’s fence, the assertion implied by them is that bigger, to the tune of 10,000 square feet or more, is simply better. Sustainability be damned.

On the Big Island, where the 21st-century subtropical megacompound is also now very much a thing, Musubi House, by architect Craig Steely, demonstrates a wholly different approach.

The client came to Steely, an architect who works in both the Islands and California and has in the last ten years completed 10 houses in Hawaii, with three more currently in-progress, with a “simple” but not-so-simple directive: design a house that embraces the natural conditions of the site. For Steely, these 100 Hāmākua coast acres of windswept grasslands fronting the Pacific came with a self-imposed caveat. Only a result exhibiting social responsibility would be acceptable. The point of departure was clear.

In keeping with his overall body of work, Steely, a devoted surfer and thus someone who has spent significant time in the ocean observing the coastline (and how most buildings detract from it), proceeded to design a small house that, with its bohemian openness of plan, glass walls, central atrium and lanai, manages to feel large.

Built into the slope of its 100-acre lot, Musubi House encompasses a mere 2,200 square feet. Its architecture, distinguished by a seemingly floating quadrangle roof that recalls a Northrop B-2 jet (annual rainfall here averages 102 inches and winds often reach 70 mph), posits that this terrain and nature’s flows at this location—not any preexisting design vocabulary mired in nostalgia—should serve as the ultimate generative factor.

Indeed, the house persuasively makes the case that, in a setting as extraordinary as this, any attempt at basing the design on “blending in” could only ever fall short. It also suggests that exercising restraint, in terms of footprint, may be the ultimate show of appreciation and respect for a locality—land and sky, people and culture.



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Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/richardolsen/2025/12/07/forbes-house-of-the-week-big-island-breakaway/