Northwell opens 10,000-square-foot women's health center in Manorville
Northwell opened a 10,000-square-foot women's health center in Manorville on Jan. 16, 2026. It centralizes East End women's care and supports planned maternity services.

Northwell Health opened a new 10,000-square-foot multispecialty women’s health center in Manorville on Jan. 16, 2026, aiming to centralize and streamline specialty care for East End residents. The facility at 496 County Road 111, Building G, sits inside the hospital’s medical village and is part of the system’s Katz Institute for Women’s Health.
The Manorville site houses 15 exam rooms, two ultrasound rooms, a procedure room and an on-site laboratory, and will bring together services that previously forced some patients to travel off the East End. The center will provide breast surgery, plastic surgery, maternal-fetal medicine, urogynecology, fertility services and general OB/GYN care. About a dozen physicians are expected to practice at the location.
Northwell said the roughly $5 million construction project was designed to create a one-stop hub for diagnostics and specialty consultations. The on-site lab and ultrasound rooms aim to reduce turnaround times for tests and imaging, while the procedure room allows minor outpatient interventions without needing to move patients to a different campus.
The new Manorville center complements the planned Emilie Roy Corey Center for Women and Infants at nearby Peconic Bay Medical Center, and supports future plans tied to expanded maternity and neonatal services at the hospital campus. Northwell already operates similar women’s health centers on Long Island in Smithtown, Huntington and Deer Park, and leaders framed the Manorville opening as part of a broader strategy to bring more specialty care closer to where people live.

For East End residents, the center promises more local access to fertility care and maternal-fetal specialists, services that can require repeated visits and timely imaging. Locating multiple specialties under one roof should shorten travel for follow-up visits and consolidate records and testing, a practical benefit for working families and those balancing commutes to the city.
The project also reflects health systems’ broader push to create community-centered medical villages that keep routine and specialty care out of crowded hospital emergency departments. By co-locating breast, surgical and obstetric services, the Manorville center is intended to smooth care coordination as plans for expanded maternity and neonatal capacity move forward at the adjacent hospital campus.
As the center begins serving patients, East End families will likely see quicker access to diagnostics and a more coordinated referral path for complex pregnancies and reproductive care. The opening marks a step toward keeping more women’s health services on the East End as local plans for expanded maternal and neonatal care proceed.
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