Prior to the construction of the first courthouse in the judicial complex in the A Parda neighbourhood, most of the courts were scattered in various buildings in the city of Pontevedra, many of which were rented, so that over time the need to bring all the courts together in a single judicial complex became apparent. Some of the courts were located in the Palace of Justice of Pontevedra, seat of the
Provincial Court, inaugurated on 17 September 1956 in
Rosalía de Castro Street. In 1948 the city council had ceded the site formerly occupied by the old prison to build the Palace of Justice and in 1954 the Pontevedra Provincial Council contributed one million pesetas to its construction. After a delay of several years, on 18 April 1995 the project for a new building for the city's courts, designed by the architect Fernando Martínez Sarandeses, was presented. The planned eight-storey building was to be erected behind the Palace of Justice in the
Campolongo district, on the site of the present-day Libertad Square. However, in August 1995, the city's mayor, Juan Luis Pedrosa, reached a difficult agreement to build the new court building in the A Parda neighbourhood, on the site of the former provincial prison. The project kept the design planned for the Campolongo district with some specific modifications to adapt it to the new site of the A Parda district. Work began on 30 May 1996, after the demolition of the old prison, and was completed in February 1998. By 2010, this court building was already congested due to lack of space, which highlighted the need to construct a new court building attached to the one inaugurated in 1998. The new building was inaugurated on 3 September 2019. From that moment on, Pontevedra has a Judicial Complex composed of these two court buildings in the A Parda neighbourhood. == Description ==