Floorplan

Click Here To Download A Full Size Floorplan (PDF)
Unit Types
| Room Name |
Area in SF |
Qty |
View |
| Private |
228 |
14 |
|
| Small Studio |
319 |
2 |
|
| Deluxe Large Studio |
389 |
4 |
|
Local Links & Resources
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Upcoming Events & Announcements
About The Executive Director
Stacey comes to Spring Creek with a wide variety of skills and over 10 years of nursing experience as a nursing aide and as a Registered Nurse. Her background includes psych, rehabilitation, post-operative and intra-operative nursing. She has a strong commitment to ethics, mission and values.
She was born and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah and attended Carl Albert State College in Poteau, Oklahoma. After receiving her allied health & nursing degree she moved back to Salt Lake City to be closer to her family and began to work as a surgical tech and circulator in the Operating Room. She then moved to Boise, Idaho after being offered the Director of Nursing position at Spring Creek Manor. She is married to Thure, with 2 small children, Jarret and Abrielle.
Stacey is excited to have joined the Spring Creek team and enjoys providing superior care to the residents in each facility for a better quality of life.
ASSISTED LIVING PLUS
Spring Creek runs an innovative Alzheimer’s care center that features a Brain-Gym, which is a multi-sensory environment, based on the Montessori learning methods. It is a brain-engaging place for residents to reconnect with their world. Coupled with a “Rest & Reminisce Area” where the resident can sit in a comfortable chair, with surround-sound so they can feel the sound, and a fountain with light and video to engage their senses.
“Personalized DVDs” are created for each resident showing highlights from their life that they can review, relive, and reconnect. Families are welcomed to play games and express and connect through art. This is not something they have to do, but something that they can do whenever they want to. The Memory Care Center deals with the powerful, and effective drugs of the mind, serotonin, which is released when residents play these brain activities. In many cases, they get part of their life back. |