Keahuolu Courthouse taking shape; facility targeted to open late summer 2019

Swipe left for more photos

LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today State Department of Accounting and General Services Building Construction Inspector Brian Jenkins and Deputy Chief Coordinator for Client and Administrative Services in 3rd Circuit Court Dawn West show the expansive juvenile probation office Tuesday at the Keahuolu courthouse.
LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today Construction workers put up walls Tuesday in the Keahuolu courthouse.
LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today State Department of Accounting and General Services Building Construction Inspector Brian Jenkins stands in a district courtroom Tuesday at the Keahuolu Courthouse, which is now under construction in Kailua-Kona, and describes the progress on the facility.
Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

KAILUA-KONA — The Keahuolu Courthouse is taking shape, but Kona’s first centralized judiciary complex remains about a year away from the gavel striking the block.

Crews were hammering, sawing and grinding away Tuesday as work progressed within the statuesque 140,000-square-foot facility off Makala Boulevard that’s been decades in the making.

Much of the exterior work is complete, with stately blue-hued windows installed and the facility’s name emblazoned on its facade. Inside the mighty walls, the 1-acre interior is coming to life with a grand lobby, courtrooms, temporary holding cells, a maze of secure corridors and a whole lot more.

“The community deserves this,” said Dawn West, deputy chief court administrator for the Judiciary’s 3rd Circuit, during a special hard-hat tour of the still-under-construction hall of justice that’s envisioned to meet the community’s needs beyond 2030.

The nearly $96 million courthouse is a stark contrast to the Judiciary’s current court facilities. It will bring together operations taking place at three sites comprising 32,000 square feet into one modern, state-of-the-art courthouse.

“Unlike most other communities, there actually is not a ‘courthouse’ in Kona. Instead, court proceedings are held in three separate locations in buildings that were never originally designed for court use,” West said in reference to questions raised about the need for such a costly, new courthouse.

Long referred to as the Kona Judiciary Complex, the facility is now named the Keahuolu Courthouse. It honors the ahupuaa in which it is located and was presented by the Rev. Danny Akaka Jr., West said.

Judiciary officials anticipate the $95.8 million courthouse to open to the public in late summer 2019.

“This courthouse will provide the West Hawaii community with a full-service facility where they can take care of all court-related matters in a centralized, convenient and secure environment,” said Hawaii Supreme Court Chief Justice Mark Recktenwald, who made the courthouse a priority of his administration in November 2010, less than two months after being sworn into office.

The price tag is higher than the previous figure of $90 million because it includes an additional $5.8 million allocated by the 2018 state Legislature for equipment and furniture. That contract is out to bid.

When complete, the Keahuolu Courthouse’s first floor will feature the only public entrance, a blind vendor program center, a self-help center, driver’s education, temporary detention cells, juvenile and adult client services and sheriffs operations.

The second floor will comprise two district courtrooms, one family courtroom, a traffic violations bureau, legal documents and conference rooms. Just one of the district courtrooms, both of which can seat 80 in the gallery, will be used initially as the Judiciary is “building for the future,” West said.

On the third floor, there will be two circuit courtrooms, a grand jury room, jury assembly and deliberation rooms, a law library and administrative offices.

There’s also plenty of parking with 292 stalls for the public, which includes accessible parking and charging stations for electric vehicles. That’s 363 percent more than the 63 stalls, plus “four-wheel-drive” parking, at the Keakealani Building in Kealakekua, the main court facility in Kona.

And no more will those in custody be walked through public areas because the new facility has secure elevators to transport them from temporary detention cells to secure detention areas near the courtrooms. That’s in addition to an enclosed sally port where people in custody being brought to the facility are offloaded from vehicles.

There also are secure and confidential meeting rooms for attorneys, witnesses and others, among other features.

Talk about a centralized courthouse for Kona dates back to the 1990s when, for a short period, a new judicial facility for the area appeared close to becoming reality before somehow being dropped from the Judiciary’s priority list.

Since then, new courthouses in Hilo, on Oahu and on Kauai have been planned, approved and constructed in 2009, 2010 and 2006, respectively.

The Hilo Judiciary Complex, a 175,000-square-foot facility, cost $91.7 million. The Kapolei Judiciary Complex, which includes a 123,000 square-foot courthouse and 52,306-square-foot juvenile detention facility, cost $125 million. Kauai’s Puuhonua Kaulike, a 113,000-square-foot complex, had a $42 million price tag.

A courthouse for Kona moved back on the radar in May 2009 when then-state Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald Moon said $550,000 was budgeted for planning. Late the next year, officials unveiled 12 possible sites for the facility. In October 2013, following issues with site selection and completion of environmental studies, Recktenwald selected the site off Makala Boulevard. Just more than a year later, design plans were unveiled.

Funding for the facility’s construction was passed by the state Legislature and approved by Gov. David Ige in 2015. Construction began in October 2016.

“We’re deeply grateful to the state Legislature for funding this much-needed project for the Kona community, and the whole island,” West said.

Email Chelsea Jensen at cjensen@westhawaiitoday.com.