Will County Board Graphic.02

Committee: Capital Improvements Committee Weighs $300 Million Options for Downtown Joliet Campus

Spread the love

Will County Board Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting | May 5, 2026

Article Summary
The Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee is evaluating four multi-million-dollar proposals to replace aging county buildings, balancing the specific spatial needs of the County Clerk’s office with a debate over the legalities and logistics of potentially relocating the county seat.

Will County Master Plan Key Points:

  • Wight & Company presented four building consolidation options ranging in cost from $239 million to over $306 million.

  • County Clerk Kimberly Fladhammer and her staff requested 20,000 to 40,000 square feet of dedicated warehouse space for election equipment, which is not fully addressed in current proposals.

  • Board Member Steve Balich (R-Homer Glen) suggested moving county operations to a “green space” campus outside Joliet to solve parking and expansion issues.

  • The State’s Attorney’s office confirmed that moving the county seat from Joliet requires a county-wide voter referendum.

The Will County Board Capital Improvements & IT Committee on Tuesday, May 5, 2026, reviewed four extensive architectural proposals from Wight & Company to consolidate and replace aging county facilities, sparking a complex debate over space, cost, and location.

With the current County Office Building and the EMCO building requiring significant ongoing maintenance, the county is exploring a massive infrastructure overhaul. Mike Mahoney from the County Executive’s office presented the four options, which all hover around the $300 million mark.

Option 1 proposes two separate county buildings—one for auxiliary court functions (State’s Attorney and Public Defender) with a parking garage, and a new County Office Building at the site of the old courthouse. The estimated cost ranges from $239,030,000 to $302,030,000.

Option 2 features a partnership with the City of Joliet, combining city and county offices into one complex, with an estimated total cost between $239,550,000 and $303,730,000, though Joliet would cover the costs of its own square footage. Options 3 and 4 present variations of these configurations, with Option 4 encompassing a massive 385,600 gross square-foot building housing Judicial Agency Offices, the County Office, and the City of Joliet, plus a 230,400 square-foot parking garage, topping out at an estimated $306,040,000.

“Both buildings that we’re in right now for the State’s Attorney and probation… and the EMCO building, that building is in, I don’t want to say a state of disrepair, but it is very old,” Mahoney told the committee. “There are wood floors still throughout, wood subflooring throughout. It needs a lot of work to keep maintaining, and it will continue to cost the county additional millions of dollars in maintenance costs over the next five to 10 years. Obviously, the same with this building [the current County Office Building].”

The logistical challenge of the master plan was highlighted by the Will County Clerk’s Office. County Clerk Kimberly Fladhammer and her Chief of Staff addressed the committee regarding critical space shortages affecting election operations.

The Clerk’s office currently operates with approximately 4,000 square feet in the basement to house election day equipment and cages. They noted that comparable counties utilize warehouses ranging from 20,000 to 40,000 square feet. Furthermore, the office requires dedicated space for election judge training—currently held in a borrowed Human Resources conference room—and a secure event space for central and provisional ballot counting.

“The proposal by White was approximately 33,000 square feet for the county clerk’s office, which I think would be sufficient for the day-to-day operational issues with vital records,” the Clerk’s Chief of Staff said. However, she noted it would not satisfy the massive warehouse need for equipment, which requires specialized logistical access like freight elevators and loading docks.

Board Member Steve Balich (R-Homer Glen) argued that the spatial constraints and parking issues in downtown Joliet justify moving the county’s operations entirely.

“Most of the people on the board back in the day before the courthouse was built wanted to create a green space and build our own campus, and that would eliminate all the problems going forward,” Balich said. “There’s a whole lot of land in Joliet when you go west close to Grundy County like by Minooka… There’s a whole lot of land where they want to put big solar farms in Manhattan.”

However, relocating the core functions of the county government faces a strict legal hurdle. An Assistant State’s Attorney present at the meeting clarified the statutory limitations.

“The county seat is Joliet,” the attorney stated. “You need a referendum of the whole county to move the county seat. You could move it if everybody agreed in the county that voted for it… but we cannot move the county seat just by county board action.”

Board Member Jacqueline Traynere (D-Bolingbrook), attending the meeting as a guest, reminded the committee of the historical context behind keeping the campus downtown.

“The cost to move people that are housed in the jail to a courthouse that would be built on a green space in New Lenox was just not going to be supported,” Traynere said. “Not only the cost, but just the security issues. So that was the main reason why we chose to go forward with the courthouse downtown as opposed to a green space.”

The committee did not take a formal vote on the options. Instead, members requested that Wight & Company provide additional configurations, including assessing the feasibility of adding floors to the current County Office Building—a 1949 structure originally built as a Sears store—and exploring development on the north end of the current parking lot.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

SSUCv3H4sIAAAAAAAACnSRz07DMAzG70i8Q5XzKpY10I0jB248wcTBdcwaLUum/AGhae9O0rQjB7jFP9uf/cWX+7umYQN4hey5ueQoxUrr6IODoKxJeL2auSMjydWEpArWKdA1HCDgaOBECZqodcbXKcl8gBA9+TxsRgiBDkmjwJtE2Whf4mZJTMnUkVKMrSrm4zCxBRXxfzpfoleGvH94VQYM0l9Kb8ojaQ2GbPS/suXxvliFAxn8ntxULh1pguJyX0rZ8SuQO9W+IUplK8ufFkHngq5SOjuFyhyqNhvG6QRLG9pogssr3D6EaWvPMOj8/x9JkxY+gvepXC68GoTp4PZUzTE2TAZmVSbTmXLIu023E6Lre7HlohNPYi4opx1V0pnWWYRSjEcla+sqb8AIibbYb1qOXLZih7wdeNe3m+6Ry4H3fECRPv76AwAA//8DAJrJGBCkAgAA

Township Appoints Temporary FOIA Officer During Trustee’s Leave of Absence

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Green Garden Township Board appointed resident Belinda Olszewski as a temporary, non-paid Administrative Assistant and FOIA Officer to fill the roles while Trustee Sarah Boxer is on a...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Green Garden Township Board for August 11, 2025

The Green Garden Township Board pushed forward with plans for a new town hall and approved key budget transfers to support the assessor's office during its August 11th meeting. Supervisor...
Windmill Media Logo

About Us

Your Community, Your News. Welcome to Windmill Media! Our name was inspired by the windmills that once stood as centers of town life, harnessing a natural force to power and...
Everyday Economics: CPI takes center stage as tariff-driven price pressures mount

Everyday Economics: CPI takes center stage as tariff-driven price pressures mount

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square The economy was already slowing, and that was before higher tariffs kicked in last week, raising import taxes to the highest level since the Great...
Net negative migration is harmful to the economy, economists say

Net negative migration is harmful to the economy, economists say

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Though the economy and immigration were issues that helped President Donald Trump secure the White House, some economists have said that too steep a decline...
Details pending on billions in foreign investments coming from trade deals

Details pending on billions in foreign investments coming from trade deals

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square When President Donald Trump announced a string of trade deals with key U.S. trading partners recently, he touted pledges for billions of dollars in U.S....
WCO-Finance-Aug-5.1

Will County Health Department Seeks $1 Million to Avert ‘Drastic’ Service Cuts from Expiring Grants

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Will County Health Department is requesting an additional $1 million in county funding for its 2026 budget to prevent the elimination of 11 critical staff positions, warning...
WCO-Cap-Imp-8.5.1

Will County’s “First-in-Nation” Veterans Center to House Workforce Services, Sparking Debate

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The new Will County Veteran's Assistance & Support Center will also become the home for the county's Workforce Services department, a move officials say will save approximately $250,000 in...
WCO-Finance-Aug-5.2

Improved Vendor Service Creates $1.2 Million Shortfall in Sheriff’s Medical Budget

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Will County Sheriff’s Office is facing a more than $1.2 million shortfall in its budget for inmate medical services, a problem officials attribute to an ironic cause:...
WCO-PZ-Aug-5.1

Will County Public Works Committee Unveils 25-Year Transportation Plan, Projects $258 Million Gap

ARTICLE SUMMARY: Will County officials have presented "Our Way Forward 2050," a new long-range transportation plan that provides a 25-year vision for infrastructure projects while forecasting a $258 million shortfall in...
WCO-Public-Safety.4

Will County Animal Protection Services Seeks New Facility Amid “Gaping Wound” of Space Crisis

Article Summary: Will County Animal Protection Services is seeking approval for a new facility, telling a county committee that its current building is critically inadequate for housing animals, leading to...
WCO-Cap-Imp-8.5.2

Board Confronts Animal Services Crowding, Explores Future Facility Options

ARTICLE SUMMARY: Will County officials are grappling with an ongoing animal housing crisis that has overwhelmed the county’s Animal Protective Services facility, prompting discussions about expansion, new construction, or even repurposing...
WCO-Finance-Aug-5.3

Will County Board Members Demand Transparency in Cannabis Tax Fund Allocation

ARTICLE SUMMARY: A debate over transparency and process erupted at the Will County Board’s Finance Committee meeting regarding the distribution of local cannabis tax revenue. Board members called for more...
WCO-PZ-Aug-5.2

Homer Glenn Residents Push Back on 143rd Street Widening as Officials Signal “Tentative Agreement”

ARTICLE SUMMARY: A Homer Glenn farm owner voiced strong opposition to the planned widening of 143rd Street during a county meeting, while committee members indicated a "tentative agreement" is in the...
WCO-LEG-8.5.1

Will County Forges 2026 Federal Agenda Amid D.C. Policy Shifts, ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Impacts

ARTICLE SUMMARY: The Will County Board's Legislative Committee is reshaping its federal priorities for 2026, adding new language on environmental justice and LGBTQIA+ rights while creating a more transparent process for...