Pagoda closure pushed: Inspectors find multiple hazards

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.

HILO — Officials are weighing an expedited closure of Pagoda Hilo Bay Hotel after an inspection this week found numerous health and safety issues.

HILO — Officials are weighing an expedited closure of Pagoda Hilo Bay Hotel after an inspection this week found numerous health and safety issues.

Mayor Harry Kim said a report was sent to Department of Land and Natural Resources with a recommendation that “there should be serious consideration of a closure as soon as possible.”

The Land Board voted June 9 to close the hotel — formerly known as Uncle Billy’s — July 14 rather than seeking a short-term lease that would allow it to continue operating.

The board said the closure could happen sooner, depending on results of the inspection. A new long-term lease, that could involve construction of a new hotel, is being considered.

County Managing Director Wil Okabe said the Tuesday inspection found electrical and fire code violations, heavy termite damage and areas with open ceilings. Only about a third of the 145-room hotel was in use. A plumbing inspection will occur Monday.

Additionally, Public Works Director Frank De Marco said beds were found in a stairwell.

This is not the first time problems were identified at the aging hotel, estimated in 2014 to have five to 10 years of useful life.

A DLNR report from June 2016 found the hotel to be in “extremely poor condition and bordering on a state of dilapidation.”

Peter Savio, president of Savio ABH Development Co. LLC., which took over the land lease from Hilo bay Hotel in February 2016, said the hotel was in bad shape when he took it over. The lease expired the following March when it became a revocable permit.

He said the approximately 40 remaining guests would be relocated to the Hilo Hawaiian.

Meanwhile, DLNR has hired a consultant to assess the cost of demolishing the hotel. Spokesman Dan Dennison said consultant R.M. Towill Corp. would provide the department with an estimate on costs of permitting and demolition. Those costs would be covered either by a new lessee or the state.

Kim said he knows of two companies interested in building a new hotel at the site, including Tower Development, the managing partner of the Grand Naniloa Hotel.

Email Tom Callis at tcallis@hawaiitribune-herald.com.