Monday, December 15, 2025
53.0°F

Pools, school part of Hayden Canyon plan

BETHANY BLITZ/Staff Writer | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 8 months AGO
by BETHANY BLITZ/Staff Writer
| April 6, 2016 9:00 PM

Development of the Hayden Canyon residential community in north Hayden continues to move forward.

Glen Lanker, president of the design firm working on Hayden Canyon, said the firm is wrapping up the details to secure financing for the infrastructure.

According to Lanker, it can’t sell any houses until the utilities are put in, but there is a lot of interest.

“We have a large list of people who are interested in living here,” he said. “There’s also a desire for a school in this area and an interest for alternative school choices.”

Lanker said they are working to revise their petition to the state charter school commission to form the charter school.

The entire Hayden Canyon property, which is 610 acres, has been annexed into Hayden and the plan received final approval from the city in 2014. The project includes 1,820 residential units — primarily single-family homes with a mix of attached town homes and multi-family units. Plans also include a sheriff’s substation, charter school, equestrian center and public community center.

The community center will be run by the YMCA, Lanker said. It will have a full gym, a competition-size pool and a small wading pool with a slide. It will be open to everyone, not just Hayden Canyon residents.

“There’s a critical need in this area for competition pools, for the recreation swim teams,” Lanker said.

The plan is to start building this summer, starting with streets and installing utilities.

ARTICLES BY BETHANY BLITZ/STAFF WRITER

Praise for the police
April 12, 2016 9 p.m.

Praise for the police

Cd’A department holds annual awards ceremony

COEUR d'ALENE — The Coeur d’Alene Police Department awarded 38 sworn and non-sworn members of the police department Monday, for their commitment to the safety of Coeur d’Alene.

Reconnecting with the canoe
April 2, 2016 9 p.m.

Reconnecting with the canoe

Project unites tribe members with their cultural heritage as ‘water people’

A giant log sits in a warehouse on the Coeur d’Alene reservation. It is destined for greatness. Protected by a tin roof, the log waits for its transformation into a shovel-nosed canoe.

Cutthroat Trout Conservation Project resumes
March 10, 2016 8 p.m.

Cutthroat Trout Conservation Project resumes

Plan aims to move pike from Windy Bay in Lake Cd’A to Cougar Bay

PLUMMER — The Coeur d’Alene Tribe and Idaho Department of Fish and Game are resuming their Cutthroat Trout Conservation Project this month.