• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Hub Coworking Hawaii

Hawai‘i's Best Coworking Space

  • Memberships
  • Mail Service
  • Offices & Desks
  • Meetings & Events
  • Blog
  • Waikiki
  • Entrepreneurs Sandbox

Blog

Member Feature: Alex Teece of Dreamhouse Ewa Beach

August 27, 2019

Today we’re sharing a Member spotlight featuring one of our original members, Alex Teece. Alex is the founder of Dreamhouse ‘Ewa Beach, a public charter school focused on empowering homegrown leaders for our island community.

The mission of DreamHouse ‘Ewa Beach is to “[open] doors of opportunity through high expectations, consistent support, and a culture of achievement.” We chatted with Alex, the Chief Education Officer, to learn more about what he’s building and how his school hopes to bend the trajectories of our islands’ most disadvantaged children.

Andrea Bertoli (AB): Tell us more about the vision of the school? What does this charter school offer that’s different than the public schools available in Ewa Beach?

Alex Teece (AT): At the core of the vision is empowerment. We believe that children have incredible potential that can be unlocked through putting them in situations to develop positive practices and leadership skills. Our work is to build a culture and environment where developing unique, individual potential is a focus of every single day.

While we can’t speak to what all public schools in Hawai‘i offer, what we offer is a smaller environment that focuses on leadership and identity development with a core curriculum that is grounded in inquiry and personal growth. Our learning philosophy centers around children making choices, studying those choices, their impacts, and altering their decisions, behaviors, and life based on learning new things every day.

AB: How does this fit into the bigger picture of Hawaii’s school system? 

AT: Our hope is that DreamHouse ‘Ewa Beach becomes an example of how leadership and identity development can unlock academic potential in an unprecedented way in public school. We believe that children who are grounded in who they are, and feel like they are in charge of their lives and the trajectory of their lives, can perform better in their classes and schools.

We are small and nimble, and offer an opportunity to try new things in our school; we have the capability to find what works, revise it, share it, and scale. This is where we fit into the larger system and hopefully will be able to share and spread innovative solutions for our islands’ school.

AB: How did you get involved in education? Has this always been your passion?

AT: I joined Teach For America right from college, in 2008. I joined the organization because of my interest in positively affecting the lives of others. I did not see myself as a teacher or an educator really, but over the years I have been able to blend education, business, leadership, and community service into one. This is not only a passion project of mine, but it is my job, my work, my responsibility, and really, it is my calling.

AB:  You’ve just opened your doors for the first year of 6th grade students! Congratulations! What’s enrollment like and what are you goals for attendance?

The founding 6th grade class of DreamHouse Ewa Beach is 100 seats. Our goal is to provide an opportunity to all families who are interested in our school, but per our charter, we only have 100 spaces allocated to us each year. We do keep an active waitlist, and we will let families know if and when they are next up on the list if another student/family decides not to attend.

AB: What are some of the big wins you had this year and what are the goals for 2020? What good things can we expect in the coming years from Dreamhouse?

AT: Our big wins including hiring all of our founding team, finding and renovating a facility to launch, and most importantly – welcome 100 families in our founding class. 2020 will be the first year a class promotes from one grade to the next, and we will add a 7th grade; essentially we double in staff, students, space, and supplies – it is a big growth for the first year!

And there are more good things coming:

  • An innovative partnership with Good Clean Food Hawai‘i (healthy food for the kids!)
  • STAFF POSITIONS OPEN! We will be growing and hiring, so please have a look at our website to consider joining the team!
  • Changing locations – year two will feature us moving to our new space over in the Kalaeloa region of Kapolei – this will be our long-term home.
  • Children creating and leading change in Hawai‘i! Keep an eye on the socials (Facebook + Instagram) to see our keiki growing into impactful leaders across our islands.

Watch our video below to see Alex and the Dreamhouse kids in action:

It’s our Hubiversary + This Week’s Newsletter

August 22, 2019

Stay stoked on all the events and news at Impact Hub HNL: sign up for our weekly Newsletter here.

TONIGHT from 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM. Time flies when you’re having this much fun. Come celebrate our 2-year Hubiversary Party at Ala Moana Beach Park. Join for food, drinks, games and friends. This event is free. Get all the details here.


Welcome to our New Members this week: 👋 Mi Yung Park, Brian Smith, Josh Jackson, Roy Mason, Jennie Kaahui, Bryce Henney, Erik Chang, Lesley Harvey, Dennis Burns, Jacob Thorp,Jorma Winkler, and Jodi Mews. 👋


✨UPCOMING EVENTS✨


Wine Down: Business & Legal ‘Office Hours’ with Candela Strategy Group

Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5 PM – 8:30 PM. Are you ready to move your business to the next phase and have lingering legal or business questions? Candela Hawaii is ready to help! Free event, RSVP here.


Lunch & Learn: How to Improve your Health? Start with your Home

Wednesday, September 4, 2019 at 12 PM – 1:30 PM. Learn more about how common stressors in the home negatively impact your health with Functional Medicine expert Lauren Adler. Free event, RSVP here.


Startup Grind HNL: Fireside Chat with Peter Rowan

Thursday, September 5, 2019 at 5:30 PM – 8:30 PM. Chat with Peter Rowan, who has a background in entrepreneurship and new venture strategy, and is active in the entrepreneurial community as an advisor, mentor, and investor. This is a paid event, please register here.


Wellness Wednesday: Sound Bath & Spoken Word Experience

Wednesday, September 18, 2019 at 6:30 PM – 8 PM. An evening of sound healing with Lucie Lynch and storyteller Marcia Zina Mager. This is a paid event ($15), click here to register. Members: enter to win 2 FREE tickets – see display box in the kitchen! 


Hawaii Freelancer’s Network: IP & Trademarks for Small Business

Thursday, September 19, 2019 at 12 PM – 1:30 PM. Dick Mosher of Denton’s Law Firm will share his decades of experience with intellectual property (IP) and trademark law. This is a free event, register here.


✨COMMUNITY NEWS✨


Member Organization Zero Waste Oahu (and founder Nicole Chatterson) is working hard to promote a zero waste future for the island. The community has the opportunity to play a big role with the current Waste Management Plan. If you want to help share your support of compost or recycling, read more in our Member Feature here.


Explore our Member Discount program in our newest blog article: movies, locally made products and services, website design, yoga, and MORE are yours with your memberships. See all your Discounts HERE!

Member Spotlight: Talking Trash with Nicole Chatterson of Zero Waste Oahu

August 19, 2019

Today we’re sharing a Member Spotlight featuring Nicole Chatterson. Nicole works for the University of Hawaii Office of Sustainability and she is a co-founder/director of Zero Waste Oahu. ZWO, as the name implies, is focused on a zero waste future for the island, and she’s working to bring awareness to our various waste streams. ZWO advocates for an integrated approach across the island and a move towards the four R’s: reduce, refuse, reuse, recycle.

Right now, Zero Waste Oahu is organizing community members to get their voices heard about the new Honolulu Waste Management Plan, and is advocating for inclusion of more sustainable solutions, like a policies or programs that reduce the amount of waste created in Honolulu, a large-scale composting network system that would serve residents, and better recycling (by creating less items to recycle!). Sign-up for Zero Waste Oʻahuʻs email to stay in tune and check out web feature here.

Andrea Bertoli (AB): Tell us more about the vision of the Zero Waste Oahu: what are your goals and how are you going to get there?

Nicole Chatterson (NC): Zero Waste Oʻahu envisions an equitable, waste-free future. We are achieving this vision this through policy support, community engagement, and demonstration projects that demystify waste reduction actions.

Our work starts here on Oʻahu and we plan for our impact to ripple throughout Hawaiʻi. Our goals include developing a Zero Waste Plan for Honolulu, working with the County on waste reduction policy, and reaching out to a wide range of audiences and businesses so we can help people understand how zero waste is relevant and approachable for everyone!

In the next year, we have a goal to launch a more waste reduction demo projects (like the food waste diversion demo project we are working on with the Impact Hub using Bokashi buckets), and increase our capacity to support the business sector through waste audits that will help them transition to zero waste.

AB: What does a zero-waste future look like?

NC: By definition, zero waste means keeping 90% of the waste stream out of the landfill or incinerator and creating production systems that are not harmful to people or the planet. A zero-waste future would follow the waste hierarchy, meaning we do our very best to reduce waste first. We will realize recycling is a tool to be used in moderation, not an excuse to overconsume. We would stop sending our trash and recycling overseas and into low-income neighborhoods.

We will stop wasting land, water, and energy to produce things that are designed as single-use or designed to become obsolete. We will stop using toxic and fossil fuel-based materials (like plastic) to over-package our food. Our economy would become circular, where any waste that is produced is designed to be a resource. In a circular economy we would compost and turn our food waste into a nutritious resource to grow food, instead of letting it off-gas methane in a landfill or be incinerated at H-POWER.

A zero waste future is a decision to design our society to produce less waste, instead of resigning to engineering our open spaces to become waste repositories.

AB: You were just granted a fellowship through WildGift – tell us more about that organization and how it’s going to help you here.

NC: I am soooo excited about this! Wild Gift is a year long leadership development program for social and environmental entrepreneurs that are in the process of building a social enterprise. Five of us were selected into the cohort and we will kick off our year together with a backpacking trip in the Bould-White Clouds Wilderness in Idaho – the final wilderness area created during the Obama administration.

This 3-week trek is designed to give us the gift of time, of connecting with ourselves, and our cohort away from the grind of daily life. We will then meet virtually over the next year, along with our mentors, and culminate the program in 2020 with a rafting trip.

This program will help me develop Zero Waste Oʻahu through peer-to-peer mentorship with other entrepreneurs that are launching a social venture. I also expect this program will help me become a better leader for Zero Waste Oʻahu by allowing me to unplug – there is nothing like time away from the computer, social media, and other distractions. to recharge and create clarity and direction.

AB: What’s your favorite trashy subject?
NC: Soooo many.

Fruit wrapped in plastic. Why? Why! Why?! The Simply To Go Store at UH Mānoa sells apples and oranges wrapped in plastic. I’ve been told people think itʻs more sanitary, and yet it is well-documented that plastic leaches into/onto our food, so there is really no logic here.

Also, trashy guilt is another topic I could go on about. For me, this the feeling when you end up with plastic regardless of how hard you try to eliminate it from your life. This happens to me at restaurants too often: I forget to say “no straw please” … and then Iʻm stuck with plastic.

AB: If people want to get better about reducing their waste stream, what are three easy steps they can take? 

NC:

1. If you like getting coffee or smoothies out, BYO cup! It makes a huge difference, about 30% of our waste stream is made up of single-use packaging and containers! If you do not want to buy a fancy mug, a mason jar (with a cozy to protect your hands from heat) on works perfectly! Currently, none of the single-use cups are recyclable in Honolulu. Some other cities offer compostable cups, which are a better option because they will cause less damage if they get into our natural environment. Even then, the best thing you can do is AVOID any single-use packaging because they all take a lot of resources to make and transport–which seems ridiculous when you realize that you use the cup for a matter of minutes.

2. Sign-up to opt out of junk mail. Most junk mail cannot be recycled because glossy paper and plastics are mixed in the envelopes. You can opt out of junk mail using these directions:

  • To opt out for five years: Call toll-free 1-888-5-OPT-OUT (1-888-567-8688) or visit www.optoutprescreen.com. The phone number and website are operated by the major consumer reporting companies. To opt out permanently: You may begin the permanent Opt-Out process online at www.optoutprescreen.com.

3) Buy less packaged food by shopping in bulk bins. Shopping in bulk bins means you get to choose and reuse the packaging. This is made easy by stores like Down to Earth, Kokua Market, and Safeway (the Kapahulu, Piikoi/Beretania, and Mānoa stores) which offer bulk bins for things like snacks, grains, nuts, oats, legumes, and candy. They key is to BYO container. You can tare (which means pre-weigh) plastic or glass containers at the register before shopping, and write the weight with sharpie on a sticker to put on the bin. At the check-out they subtract the weight . The tare process is not necessary if you use the light-weight reusable bags instead.

AB: How can people get involved in the organization?

NC: The best way to get involved right now is by sharing your thoughts with the County of Honolulu on a zero waste future before August 27th: find out the details on our website. Honolulu’s zero waste future needs your voice. You can also stay in touch by signing up for our newsletter on our website and follow us on Instagram, too.

Take a Peek at Your Member Benefits & Discounts

August 13, 2019

Once you walk in the doors at Impact Hub HNL, the tangible benefits of your membership are clear: it’s a creative place to work where you can connect (or not) with great people, jump on super fast wifi and drink complimentary organic coffee and tea.

You can see the full list of great amenities that come with your membership here. And we’ve just added a new, super fun option: our new, free bike borrow program. Check in with our Host to grab a bike to run a quick errand or take a leisurely ride to the park.

We’ve recently partnered with Oahu Fresh, one of Oahu’s longest-running vegetable delivery service (also called a CSA). So, you can order weekly veggies and have them delivered to you at work for easy dinners.

Impact Hub Honolulu is associated with the largest global network of social entrepreneurs. So, as a member of Impact Hub HNL, you also have access to the global network of Impact Hubs with our Global Passport. This gives you up to 3 days of access to Impact Hub locations around the world.

But wait, there’s MORE! We’ve partnered with local businesses for great discounts on local products and services. Some of the newest additions to our list of Member Discounts include:

  • The Creative Co.: A creative agency that offers websites, photography/videography, and more. Members can get a free website audit, and can take 10% off of any service proposal.
  • Pono Home Essentials, a line of zero-waste body care products; members get 5% off with discount code HUBHNL.
  • Still & Moving Center, a yoga and community space just two minutes away from our front door on Queen Street, a gorgeous studio offering yoga, dance, meditation, aerial, and more. Members get 10% off class packs (excluding aerial).

Other Member Discounts available from Consolidated Theatres (the movie theatre across the street), Pono Home, Citywide Home Loans, Lyft, Honolulu Tool Library, American Savings Bank, and more. See all your Member Discounts here.

If you’d like to add your business to our growing Member Discounts list and get your name in front of our hundreds of members and community, contact us and let us know.

Thank You for your Support! 

August 12, 2019

By George Yarbrough

We asked you to invest in us… and you did! 

We asked you to share with your friends… and you did! 

We asked you to come to our events… and you did!   

And for all of your support, our whole team says THANK YOU. 

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by The Hub (@hubcoworkinghi)

Our Wefunder campaign is now officially closed, and we are SO happy with the amount of time, energy, and money you invested in us. 

Over our three month Wefunder investment campaign, we raised$172,354, which will be utilized for the final buildout of our new Hawaii Kai location, slated to open in March 2019. 
 

Our overall goal for both of our locations (and anything we build in the future) is to help you do what you do best, and to support our growing network of entrepreneurs, startups, and small businesses. Thank you for being a part of it! You can still see the campaign details here if you want to learn more about why we chose Wefunder or about their innovative investment model. 

Stay tuned to our Instagram and Facebook to see the buildout as it happens and share your thoughts as we complete the space.

ImpactART Returns with a Hawaii Artists Group Show: ‘How Do We Do’

August 5, 2019

This August, Impact Hub HNL presents our third ImpactART event, featuring three Hawaii artists: Bai Xin Chen, Ryan Higa, and Sheanae Tam. This is the first group show that we’ve hosted, and will be slightly different than the previous shows featuring Lauren Hana Chai and Boz Schurr, as these artists all work in different mediums, bringing diverse textures and context to the show. The ImpactART evening will feature a brief program, a scavenger hunt, and a Q&A session with all three artists.

ImpactART will be held August 15, from 6pm-8pm. Everyone is welcome; RSVP for this free event here.

About the title, How Do We Do, Higa explains that, “the title ‘How Do We Do’ works on two levels. First, it refers to the physical and technical processes that we use to make the work. It’s the ‘How do you do that?’ Second, it suggests an emotional or intellectual state of being in reference to the work that we’re creating. That’s the ‘How are you doing?’ I feel that most art is a fluid combination of both Hows.”

“It refers to the physical aspect of making as well as the emotional and psychological,” Chen says of the title.

Chen has come to Oahu via China and Hong Kong. He works with wood shavings, making collages and other installations with the wood. His work has been exhibited at Impact Hub HNL, Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu Museum of Art School, and the 2019 Venice Biennale’s Imago Mundi Collection .

Higa, originally from Oahu, works with colored pencil and graphite on paper, and does larger painted installations – his work is featured on the walls of Impact Hub HNL.

Tam, also from Oahu, comes from a long line of fishermen, and her work reflects a deep connection with the ocean and its creatures. “I have been and still am constantly a part of diving, fishing, preparing, eating, and disposing all sorts of sea life. As an artist I have been recording these moments in my work, coupled with research about the ahupua’a, habitat, and nature of the creatures.” Tam works primarily with acrylic on canvas, and her work featuring the original fishponds of Kakaako adorns our walls in the nook.

Register for the event here. 

More about ImpactART: Our ImpactART program supports Hawaii’s artists by creating an equal exchange of artwork for studio and exhibition space. Co-created by Impact Hub Honolulu and Honolulu Biennial Foundation in 2017 to address the need for art studios and the proper valuation of artists’ work, ImpactART will trade space, materials and a gallery show within the Impact Hub for art.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 28
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

  • Our Services
    • Memberships
    • Mail Service
    • Offices & Desks
    • Meeting & Event Space
    • Schedule a Tour
  • For Members
    • FAQs
    • Member Discounts
    • Cancel or Pause Membership
    • Referral Program
    • Planned Events
  • New Waikiki Location
  • Our Do Good
    • Annual Impact Reports
    • Back Together Fund & Scholarships
  • About Us
    • Blog
    • 360° Virtual Tour
    • Testimonials
    • Press
    • Events Photo Gallery
    • Hub Life Story
    • Visit Us & Parking Info
    • Careers
    • Contact

Categories

Sign up for Our Newsletter

Name(Required)
Email(Required)
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Phone
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Locations

Kaka’ako

1050 Queen Street #100
Honolulu, HI 96814-4130

Waikiki

2330 Kalakaua Ave #248
Honolulu, HI 96815

(808) 664-3306

Parking

Parking Garage Entrance:
1065 Kawaiahao
$0.50/hour with validation
6:30am-8:30pm M-F

Copyright © 2025 Hub Coworking Hawaii · 1050 Queen St. #100 Honolulu, HI 96814 · Log in

  • Terms of Service
  • Membership Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy