Heritage Health Breaks Ground Feb. 5 on Integrated $4M Health Campus
Heritage Health will break ground Feb. 5 on a $4 million expansion at 3700 W. Seltice Way in Coeur d'Alene, centralizing medical, dental and behavioral services for easier local access.

Heritage Health announced on Jan. 20 that it will hold a groundbreaking ceremony at noon Feb. 5 for Phase 2 of its Center for Healthy Living, a $4 million expansion at 3700 W. Seltice Way in Coeur d'Alene. The project will expand the campus into an integrated health hub that co-locates primary medical care, dental services, pediatrics, behavioral health, substance-use treatment, psychiatry, an on-site pharmacy and workforce training.
Phase 1 of the Center for Healthy Living consolidated behavioral health and psychiatry services and opened about a year ago. Phase 2 builds on that foundation by adding prevention and long-term health elements intended to keep more care under one roof. Planned amenities include a teaching kitchen, a community gathering space, a movement studio and an outdoor walking trail aimed at encouraging healthy living and education alongside clinical services.
Heritage Health leadership has framed the integrated model as a way to remove barriers to care by improving coordination among providers and reducing the need for patients to travel between multiple locations. The campus approach is designed to streamline referrals, simplify follow-up care and make it easier for families to access different types of care in a single visit.
Developer Parkwood Business Properties and Young Construction Group are listed as project partners on the expansion. The organizations will oversee development and construction work as Heritage Health readies the site and expands services. Construction activity is expected to ramp up after the Feb. 5 ceremony, with an anticipated completion in fall 2026.

For Kootenai County residents, the center aims to increase local capacity for both clinical treatment and workforce development. The inclusion of workforce training signals a dual focus on patient care and building local health-care talent, which could help meet demand for nurses, dental assistants and behavioral health specialists in north Idaho. The community gathering space and teaching kitchen add a prevention and education component that complements clinical services, offering residents more options for wellness programming close to home.
The project also represents a continued investment on Seltice Way and contributes to broader health infrastructure growth in Coeur d'Alene. Residents can expect visible construction at 3700 W. Seltice Way over the coming months and phased openings as individual services become operational through fall 2026. The Feb. 5 groundbreaking will mark the formal start of an effort to make health care more coordinated, accessible and locally rooted for the county.
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