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Investing in Justice: Courthouse Complex

Milwaukee is Investing in Infrastructure to Improve Safety, Outcomes

Like all Wisconsin counties, Milwaukee County is considered an administrative arm of the State of Wisconsin and is mandated to provide certain services, including judicial services. As a result, Milwaukee County maintains and operates facilities at the Courthouse Complex in downtown Milwaukee.

The Public Safety Building must be replaced. At nearly 100 years old, the facility is crumbling, inefficient, and poses risks to community safety and justice. In addition to the Public Safety Building, the Courthouse Complex also includes the Historic Courthouse and Criminal Justice Facility. Both facilities serve important purposes, including support for services that the State requires the County to provide. The Historic Courthouse and Criminal Justice Facility are also in need of renovations but will not be replaced.

Construction is critical and urgent. We cannot afford to wait to replace the Public Safety Building or renovate the Complex. With a new building and through renovations, Milwaukee County can move toward its goal of becoming the healthiest County in Wisconsin.

The Courthouse Complex is comprised of three buildings in downtown Milwaukee: The Historic Courthouse (901 N. 9th St.), the Criminal Justice Facility (949 N. 9th St.) and the Public Safety Building (821 W. State St.)

Milwaukee County can become the healthiest County in Wisconsin by delivering upstream investments that make our communities safer and stronger. The Investing in Justice: Courthouse Complex project presents a generational opportunity to think beyond buildings in order to re-envision how infrastructure can support improved outcomes for our neighbors and advance our key priorities to foster a safer, more equitable future for all.

Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley

Years of Analysis Point to Path Forward

In 2016, a Milwaukee County Courthouse Advisory Group was created to address critical problems with the Public Safety Building. That group published a report that recommended replacing the Public Safety Building and moving all criminal courts into one facility. That recommendation was backed up in 2018 by a Wisconsin Policy Forum report further exploring the need for investments and options to finance a new facility.

Nearly a decade after the Courthouse Advisory Group was created, Milwaukee County faces a now-critical need to re-envision and invest in justice and safety through the construction of a new building to replace the crumbling Public Safety Building and the renovation of the other integrated facilities

Spaces in the Public Safety Building are Functionally Obsolete

Many spaces do not comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). 60,000 square feet (20% of the building) sit vacant due to low ceiling heights, uneven flooring, and inadequate column density that make the space unsafe and undignified. Most of the vacant space is in the old county jail, which has not been used for 30 years. Infrastructure is failing: facades are crumbling, pipes are leaking, and windows are breaking. The electrical system has exceeded its useful lifespan, air distribution is limited without mechanical ventilation, air quality issues exist, and there is known asbestos and lead-containing materials in the building. 

Police car damaged by fallen debris from the Public Safety Building. 

In a new building, Milwaukee County can create a significantly improved environment that supports the unique needs of the justice system, improves employees' and constituents' experiences, provides connections to support services, and addresses very real challenges with safety, dignity, and credibility in the justice system.


Partnering with the Community, System Experts to Plan for the Future 

Since 2016, the Milwaukee County budget has included funding to plan for the future of justice system facilities.

In September 2024, Milwaukee County identified a design consultant team that will work in partnership with County officials and secure input from stakeholders in order to design a new building to meet the County’s needs. That team includes Gilbane | Cullen, a Joint Venture, serving as the Construction Manager at Risk (CMaR) for the project. AECOM, a global infrastructure consulting firm, was brought on to provide architectural planning and design services. A team from the National Center for State Courts (NCSC)’s Court Consulting Services Division was hired to secure stakeholder input that will help shape the function, programs, and services possible in a new building.

In 2025 and 2026, Milwaukee County and its design consultant team facilitated more than 45 programming workshops and 40 additional meetings to gain input and identify needs.

The identified priorities for the project include:

  • Ensure Safety and Security
  • Enhance Operational Efficiency
  • Design for Systems Outcomes and Future Adaptability
  • Support Community Well-Being
  • Promote Accessibility and Inclusivity
  • Plan for Financial Responsibility and Cost Efficiency
  • Continue Stakeholder Engagement and Communication
  • Advance the County’s Climate Policy

These priorities informed the Conceptual Design that was presented to the County Board in March 2026.

Conceptual Design Sketches for the Public Safety Building Replacement

Moving Forward

The next phase, Schematic Design, will take the building from concept to blueprint and create additional conversation around future programs and services.

Design efforts will continue through 2028. By early 2028, all offices, services, and programs will be moved out of the Public Safety Building — most into the Historic Courthouse, which will temporarily house all courtrooms. Demolition of the Public Safety Building will take place in 2028, and construction of the new building is anticipated to last from 2029 through 2032. 

Milwaukee County will continue to approach this process intentionally with community input to ensure that facilities support the County’s efforts to advance better outcomes for our community.

 


Frequently Asked Questions

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What’s wrong with the Public Safety Building?

The nearly 100-year-old building creates structural challenges and impacts court services and outcomes. A handful of challenges include:

  • Safety and Security
    • Courtrooms in both the Public Safety Building and in the Historic Courthouse are used to try criminal cases but were not designed for modern needs. This is unsafe and inefficient.
    • The Public Safety Building’s layout does not comply with Wisconsin Supreme Court Rule #68 governing the structure and design of courthouses. There are no secure pathways. Public hallways are used to transport nearly 10,000 in-custody defendants annually.
  • Operational and Financial Efficiency
    • 10 floors — nearly 60,000 square feet. including former jail space in the Public Safety Building — are vacant, unusable, and unable to be cost-effectively retrofitted for other purposes.
    • There are concerns around the preservation of evidence, particularly the risk of damage from water intrusion or flooding in the current facility.
  • Systems Outcomes and Adaptability
    • There are no dedicated spaces for attorney-client meetings. Anyone can overhear sensitive information.
    • Defendants and attorneys often hold what some call “garbage can meetings” in public hallways, with case materials or laptops perched on the only surface available — the tops of garbage cans.
    • There are insufficient private spaces for survivors, witnesses, and family members to find respite during the potentially traumatic experience of attending or testifying at court proceedings.
    • Proceedings may be delayed or rescheduled due to a number of factors, like in-custody defendant transfers being late due to slow or broken elevators.
    • Jury rooms are uncomfortable and are not temperature regulated, which can interfere with the deliberative process.
  • Community Well-Being
    • Community members who visit to access services have a difficult time finding where they need to be in the Public Safety Building and throughout the Courthouse Complex, which can feel like a maze.
    • Insufficient space for supporting programs and services.
  • Accessibility and Inclusivity
    • The Courthouse Complex is not Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)-friendly.
    • There is insufficient technology to support interpretation and translation services.
How will public safety outcomes improve with a new building?

A shared investment in a new building will deliver generational improvements to public safety and justice in Wisconsin:

•  Secure corridors will reduce staffing needs for transports by 80% — freeing up nearly 2,100 hours for redeployment to public safety duties.

•  Officers freed from courthouse duty will spend more time in the community — an efficient building means faster processing, fewer court delays, and more officers available where they’re needed most: in the community. 

•  Fewer delays and mistrials will lead to faster, safer, less costly proceedings — a modern facility will reduce security calls, prevent mistrials, and ensure faster and safer proceedings.

•  Taxpayers across Wisconsin will benefit from long-term savings and a stronger justice system — a purpose-built facility will support night court, virtual court, and specialty court operations, reducing backlog, increasing access, and saving money.

Currently, state mandates cost Milwaukee County roughly $284.7 million per year. That’s nearly 80% of Milwaukee County’s local levy — and they’re growing at two times the rate of revenues. Separate from its peers, Milwaukee County is uniquely impacted by mandated services, including providing Highway Patrol services and operating the Community Reintegration Center — the only Wisconsin county required to provide / operate either service. Milwaukee County also operates the largest circuit court in Wisconsin on the State's behalf, processing 111,398 cases in 2024 (more than Brown, Dane, and Waukesha counties combined) and, over the last decade, individuals from every Wisconsin county have been booked in Milwaukee County's jail. 

The outdated Public Safety Building puts public safety and justice at risk, and the State has a unique opportunity to invest in a shared system that serves every Wisconsinite and improves public safety in our communities.

Where would a new building be located?

Milwaukee County has reaffirmed its 2018 recommendation to build a replacement for the Public Safety Building on the current building’s site. This approach will allow Milwaukee County to maintain the critical connection between the building and the Criminal Justice Facility, allow for an efficient building layout and construction process, and was determined to be the cost-effective option. The Historic Courthouse will not be demolished as part of this work.

To ensure operations continue uninterrupted throughout construction, Milwaukee County has already begun planning for spaces where some functions and services currently carried out in the Courthouse Complex will be temporarily moved. As temporary spaces are finalized in 2026 and any offices or services are shifted, Milwaukee County will share relevant updates with the community.

Demolition of the existing building is anticipated to begin in 2028, with construction and related Historic Courthouse renovations continuing into 2032.

Additional details about this effort will be shared in the months and years ahead.

Will the existing Historic Courthouse be demolished?

No.

How much would it cost to build a new facility?

Milwaukee County remains in the early stages of planning for facility construction or renovations, and design and construction costs will influence total project costs. Previous estimates range from $400-500 million.

What would happen if Milwaukee County chose not to prioritize investment in the Courthouse Complex?

Without a new building, Milwaukee County will continue to face safety risks, delays, rising costs, and negative public safety impacts across the region. Safety and security issues tied to the building’s layout and structure will continue. Mistrials related to a lack of secured, separated corridors will continue. Backlogs of cases may increase. County deferred maintenance costs will continue to grow.

Delaying this project any further would also mean that project costs would increase by hundreds of millions of dollars, and the County’s ability to make future capital investments would be in jeopardy.

Removing the Public Safety Building and renovations throughout the Courthouse Complex is not a matter of if, but when.

What state mandated services are performed within the Courthouse Complex? What services and programming will be in the new building?

The Public Safety Building is the facility where Milwaukee County delivers many of the services mandated by the state, such as criminal courts, the District Attorney office, public defenders, pretrial services, and more. These services are expected to be housed in the new building.   

A new building is also an opportunity to reimagine how the Courthouse Complex provides resources and programming to those impacted by the justice process. As Milwaukee County works with our community to catalog services and facility needs, judicial system leaders are committed to re-envisioning how the building’s design can complement and support Milwaukee County’s goal to provide justice services and programming with dignity and a human-centered approach for all involved.  

Milwaukee County has some of the highest incarceration rates among Black men. If the County is committed to racial equity, why is it investing in updating the Courthouse Complex? Won’t that increase incarceration in our community?

Building a new, modern, and efficient building to replace the Public Safety Building will not create additional arrests or increase incarceration, as there will be no additional jails or bed space in a new building.  

Milwaukee County’s Courthouse Complex is severely outdated and, in some cases, functionally obsolete, presenting numerous challenges. A new building must happen. However, the necessary replacement and renovations within the Courthouse Complex present a unique opportunity to create facilities that are designed with a trauma-informed lens and a restorative, community focus. With intentional design, Milwaukee County strives to improve outcomes for all those who interact with the justice system by reducing future case backlogs, efficiently connecting individuals to necessary services, and providing a safe environment for all. Through these investments, Milwaukee County’s goal is to leverage this as an opportunity to create new facilities that foster greater dignity for those involved in the justice system.  

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