![cover image](https://wikiwandv2-19431.kxcdn.com/_next/image?url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6e/Outside_Kauikeaouli_Hale_at_1111_Alakea%252C_Honolulu%252C_Oahu%252C_video_%2528frame%2529_taken_from_inside_The_Bus.jpg/640px-Outside_Kauikeaouli_Hale_at_1111_Alakea%252C_Honolulu%252C_Oahu%252C_video_%2528frame%2529_taken_from_inside_The_Bus.jpg&w=640&q=50)
Kauikeaouli Hale
District courthouse for the Island of Oʻahu in Hawaii / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kauikeaouli Hale is a district courthouse for the Island of Oʻahu in Hawaii.
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It is located at 1111 Alakea Street between downtown Honolulu and the Hawaii Capital Historic District at 21°18′32″N 157°51′31″W. Its lower floors house the courts of the first circuit, covering the City and County of Honolulu,[1] and upper floors have offices of some support departments of the Hawaii Supreme Court.[2] It is adjacent to the Hawaii State Art Museum.
On August 18, 2023, the building was closed due to structural damages.[3]
In the Hawaiian language, hale means "house"[4] and Kauikeaouli was the birth name of the Kingdom of Hawaii’s King Kamehameha III (1813–1854). The art displayed at Kauikeaouli Hale includes:[5]
- Aged Tree, a 1976 wood, copper and bronze sculpture by Satoru Abe
- Bear and Cubs, a 1973 black granite sculpture by Benny Bufano
- Hawaiian Mountain Series I, a 1974 ceramic sculpture by Bob Flint
- My Father's Eyes Have Seen What I Dreamed, a 1971 ceramic, wood and resin sculpture by Donald Harvey
- Family Structure, a 1971 wood sculpture by Ken Shutt