Aliomanu Road in Anahola to close for resurfacing work May 28-June 1
Aliomanu Road in Anahola will shut down weekdays from May 28 to June 1 for resurfacing, with no parking allowed inside the work zone.

A portion of Aliomanu Road in Anahola will close fully for resurfacing from May 28 through June 1, with weekday work scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., weather permitting. Kauai County says Grace Pacific and county crews will handle the work, and the closure will require drivers to plan for a break in normal traffic flow through the corridor.
The county said no parking will be allowed in the closure area, and flaggers will be posted to direct traffic and help residents move through the construction zone when possible. Motorists are being told to use alternate routes and allow extra time, a warning that will matter most for Anahola households and businesses that depend on reliable access for work shifts, deliveries, school drop-offs and medical appointments.

Questions about the project can go to Grace Pacific contact Jordan Ching at 808-688-3305 or jching@gracepacific.com. The resurfacing is part of the county’s broader road maintenance effort, and the Public Works Department’s Road Resurfacing and Bridge Status Map says 146 of 156.75 lane miles have been paved so far, with $72,767,726 budgeted and $53,592,780.56 billed to date since 2020.
Aliomanu Road also appears in the County of Kaua‘i FY 2026 capital budget as a planning and permitting project, underscoring that the corridor remains part of longer-term transportation work. County records show the roadway has a history of erosion-related damage. A final environmental assessment for the Aliomanu Road Repair Project says the road near Anahola was repaired to conditions that existed before portions of the roadway collapsed because of shoreline erosion.
County annual reporting has also noted continuing repair and stabilization work along Aliomanu Road in Anahola due to wave erosion. The new closure is intended to improve the surface and extend the life of the road, but for the five-day work window it will tighten access through one of Anahola’s key corridors and shift traffic patterns around the area.
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