Hawai`i State Route 11 and Hawai`i County Route 182 join for 0.2 miles near Kailua-Kona on the island and county of Hawai`i.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
Northbound on HI 11/Queen Kaahumanu Highway a few miles south of Kailua-Kona. The southern split of the multiplex is mis-signed with an HI 180 shield instead of 182. CR 182 is Hualalai Road, named for the volcano that peaks a few miles to the east. There are no indications along CR 182 that it is numbered.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
HI 11/Queen Kaahumanu Highway northbound approaching the southern split of the multiplex. CR 182/Hualalai Road meets HI 180/Mamalahoa Highway three miles to the east in Holualoa.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
CR 182 is signed only as Hualalai Road. CR 182 west merges with HI 11 north here.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
Less than a quarter mile to the north, the two routes split. CR 182/Hualalai Road turns left and continues northwestward to end at Kuakini highway (old HI 11) in Kailua-Kona. When the modern, two-lane HI 11/Queen Kaahumanu Highway was built, part of it paralleled the windy Hualalai Road, and so the alignments were combined for this quarter-mile stretch.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
A look to the left shows where CR 182/Hualalai Road meets HI 11/Queen Kaahumanu Highway at the northern split.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
Southeastbound on CR 182/Hualalai Road at the northern split. The road bends sharply to the left to meet HI 11/Queen Kaahumanu Highway at an approximate right angle.

Timothy Reichard 1/13/05
As with many intersections along the Queen Kaahumanu Highway, this intersection includes a right-turn lane that bypasses the stop sign for left-turning traffic.