Ellicott City Historic Courthouse
Howard County recently vacated the historic Circuit Courthouse located at 8360 Court Avenue in Ellicott City, MD, and relocated to a newly developed state-of-the-art Circuit Courthouse. This relocation creates a unique reuse opportunity of the County-owned historic courthouse and adjacent properties.
During his 2023 State of the County speech, County Executive Ball announced that the Historic Courthouse in Ellicott City will be repurposed to become a transformative Center for Arts, Culture, and History. After receiving comments from more than 600 community stakeholders, the historic courthouse will become a space for the Howard County Center for the Arts, the County’s first Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Cultural Center, the nationally recognized Roving Radish, and a shared commercial kitchen space.
Questions? Contact us at eccourthouseproject@howardcountymd.gov .
Community Outreach Meeting – May 30, 2024
The Department of Public Works hosted a community outreach meeting on the Historic Courthouse Renovation project on Thursday, May 30, 2024 at 6:00 p.m. The purpose of this meeting was to provide information on the capital project to renovate and revitalize the Historic Circuit Courthouse in Ellicott City into a new Center for Arts, Culture, and History.
The adaptive reuse of this building will create a new community center and cultural hub that becomes home to the Howard County Arts Council, the first-ever Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Cultural Center, the County's award-winning Roving Radish program and a Shared Commercial Kitchen space.
During the meeting, the County and its consultant team presented information on the project scope and timeline. To review the presentation given at the meeting, click here.
Information Session – October 25, 2023
The Department of Public Works hosted an information session on the Historic Circuit Courthouse on Wednesday, October 25, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. The County and its consultant team discussed potential concepts for the future of the Courthouse. To review the slides on the Courthouse presented at the meeting, click here.
Community Input Meeting – July 20, 2021
Howard County hosted a public meeting to discuss the potential redevelopment of the Historic Ellicott City Courthouse and associated properties on Tuesday, July 20th, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. The County and its consultant team discussed potential concepts for the courthouse redevelopment and is seeking additional public feedback on those concepts.
See the meeting presentation here.
Ellicott City Watershed Master Plan Courthouse Policies
The Ellicott City Watershed Master Plan (ECWMP) was initiated in summer of 2017 to respond to the 2016 floods and was adopted by the County Council on Dec 7, 2020. The plan is the culmination of a multi-year public outreach process and features conceptual illustrations that can serve as inspiration should specific opportunities arise over time.
The plan concept for the courthouse complex calls for a mixed-use development at the courthouse site with an emphasis on pedestrian and open space connections. The plan recommended that potential reuse of the courthouse property should emphasize uses that are complementary—rather than competitive—to the retail mix that currently exists along Main Street.
Link to the Ellicott City Watershed Master Plan
Courthouse Property History
After the creation of Howard District of Anne Arundel County in 1840, which was a prelude to the formation of Howard County, it was necessary for the new district to establish its own courthouse, jail, and almshouse in what would become the county seat, Ellicott's Mills. The original section of the Courthouse was designed and built in 1840-43 by Charles Timanus, who also designed the Patapsco Female Institute.
A newer addition was added to the Courthouse in the 1950's but it was placed to the rear of the existing structure so that the original remains unchanged from the front and side views. The Courthouse is a Classic Revival structure, built of locally quarried granite and is significant not only architecturally but because it has been a repository for Howard County Government almost since the government began. "Oak Lawn" (see below) is now attached to the Howard County Courthouse by a modern addition. Oak Lawn was originally a residence, but after purchase by the County in 1937 the house became the offices of the Board of Education.
The Old Jail was completed and accepted in December 1851, and it survives as the rear, stone wing of the existing jail. Apparently, the need for additional accommodations at the jail prompted the Commissioners to request proposals again in 1878. The building continued in use as a jail until the early 1980s, when a new detention center was opened in Jessup, and the jail continued to be used by the Sheriff’s Department until recently.
The Courthouse and the Jail House are listed in the both the Howard County Historic Sites Inventory and the Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties and are located in a local historic district and a National Register District.
Howard County Courthouse Historic Inventory Form
Howard County Jail Historic Inventory Form
Oak Lawn Inventory Form (Hayden House, former Board of Ed. Building)
Ellicott City Historic District Inventory Form
Ellicott City National Register District