In principle, not much different to LIGO, since LIGO is sensitive to kHz gravitational waves. But you need to find ways to increase the sensitivity at kHz frequencies, without compromising response at lower frequencies, or perhaps having a tuneable response. These improvements are likely to come with increased laser power and developments in the optics and mirror coatings.
Detecting gravitational waves (GWs) is limited at high frequencies by the length (or effective length, with some cunning deployment of mirrors) and at low frequencies by various sources of noise, including "radiation pressure noise" which is an inescapable consequence of using powerful lasers to do the detection.
Roughly speaking, to get maximum sensitivity at 1kHz (LIGO is most sensitive at 100Hz), you make your interferometer arm length equal to a quarter of the GW wavelength (or the total path length of the light to be $\lambda_{\rm GW}/2$). This ensures that perturbations to the arm length all "sum up" whilst the laser light is in transit. Thus for a GW frequency of 1KHz that means $L \simeq 75$ km (or a total path of 150 km).
That's fine - something of LIGO's size can be made effectively that long by bouncing the light up and down the arms about 10 times, which is much less than the $\sim 270$ times that LIGO uses in order to get sensitivity at lower frequencies.
Sources of noise at 1kHz are mostly limited to simple "shot noise" due to the finite number of photons in the laser beam. So you would need to boost the power at the beam splitter by using a more powerful laser to begin with or by employing clever recycling techniques to amplify that power within the interferometer arms.
In LIGO, they use a laser with a power of about 40W, split between two arms. The 4km arms form Fabry Perot resonators that boost this by a factor of 270, but that isn't the power at the beam splitter. From the beam splitter's point of view, the FP arms are about 0.97 times reflective. To amplify the power at the beam splitter you put a recycling mirror prior to the beam splitter, with a reflectivity of 0.97. This allows all power to transmit into the FP arm cavity, but also amplifies the power between the beam splitter and the FP input mirror by a factor of about 35.
At present LIGO is tuned to have a high amplification factor in the FP arms and a modest power recycling gain, which is limited by the effective reflectivity of the FP cavity due to losses at the reflective surfaces.
To get more power at the beam splitter, whilst maintaining sensitivity at 100 Hz, would need big improvements in the mirror and mirror coatings technology; improvements in laser stability at high power and the clever used of "squeezed vacuum" techniques which can to some extent shape the noise frequency profile, allowing modest improvements in the shot noise at the expense of radiation pressure noise at lower frequencies. For instance, by minimising losses in the mirrors, one could make the FP arms more reflective, which allows a bigger recycling gain (which goes as $(1-R)^{-1}$).
Even without these improvements, you could tune LIGO to work better at 1kHz, at the expense of its response at lower frequencies. The gain of 270 is not realised at high frequencies. You could drop this to around 20, which would increase the reflectivity of the FP arms to about 0.997 by reducing the losses (which increase with how many times the light bounces around) and could then use a more reflective power recycling mirror and get a power recycling boost of 330. This would gain you a factor of $\sqrt{10}$ in SNR at 1kHz at the expense of losing a factor of 10 sensitivity at 100Hz.
There is lots more detail in the technical documentation for the Einstein Telescope. This proposed third generation GW detector operates on the same principle as LIGO, but with improvements. It will have several "V" shaped interferometers to improve its directional response and remove dead spots; it will use more powerful lasers; it will operate cryogenically to improve sensitivity at low frequencies; it will have 2 interferometers within each set of arms, tuned for low and high frequencies respectively, as I've indicated above; it will have 10 km arms and use more massive mirrors to reduce the effects of radiation pressure and other displacement noise at low frequencies; and it is proposing big developments in optics technology (e.g. mirror losses at 1 ppm) to boost power and get high frequency response.