Flying Pickle to build $5M indoor pickleball complex in Post Falls
A Meridian franchise is developing an 85,000-square-foot indoor pickleball club in Post Falls, bringing 24 courts and events that could reshape local play and tourism.

A Meridian-based franchise is developing a $5 million, 85,000-square-foot indoor pickleball facility at 140 N. Beck Road in The Pointe at Post Falls, a move that will create the largest dedicated indoor club in Kootenai County. The venue will open with 24 indoor courts, a bar and kitchen, event space, court cameras for player review, on-site pro and club directors, and a retail pro shop. Project partners include architect Cushing Terrell and the Spokane office of Swinerton Builders.
The club is expected to host Professional and Amateur Pickleball Association tournaments, a function that could draw competitors and spectators from across the Inland Northwest. The general manager described the venue as "world-class." Local players have said the added indoor capacity will meet high daytime demand, particularly on weekdays when community courts currently fill quickly.
Pickleball infrastructure in the region already includes numerous outdoor and smaller indoor courts, but this development represents a significant step up in scale. At 85,000 square feet and 24 courts, the facility consolidates court supply in a single location, offering tournament-grade amenities and extended playing hours that many municipal facilities cannot provide. For players who travel for competitive play, a centralized arena with event space and professional staff reduces friction for hosting multi-court tournaments and clinics.
Economic effects for Post Falls and Kootenai County could include increased visitation for weekend and tournament play, with secondary spending at nearby hotels, restaurants, and retail. Construction work associated with an office-managed development of this size typically supports local contractors and trades during build-out, and the finished club will create full- and part-time jobs in operations, coaching, hospitality, and retail. For local players, the addition of court cameras and pro instruction raises the level of available coaching and match analysis without traveling out of county.

The project also changes the competitive landscape for local clubs and parks agencies by introducing a high-capacity indoor option that can host sanctioned events year-round, insulating play from winter weather and daylight limits. That reliability is likely to shift some league play and tournament scheduling toward the new venue, affecting demand patterns at existing facilities.
The club is accepting membership inquiries and will post further details, including memberships and programs, at theflyingpickle.com. For Kootenai County players and businesses, the new facility signals both a boost in local recreational infrastructure and a potential source of regional sports tourism; next steps will be construction timing, permitting, and scheduling of inaugural events that will determine when those impacts materialize.
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