A major milestone was reached this winter in the fight to address St. Louis’ youth mental health crisis St. Louis Children’s Hospital And KVC Health System Celebrated the groundbreaking of a new, state-of-the-art child mental health hospital in Webster Groves.
Expected to open in late 2026, the 77-bed facility is the result of a joint venture between the two organizations and will offer four levels of care for children and teens aged 6-18. Built into KVC Missouri’s Children’s Mental Wellness Campus, the hospital aims to expand urgently needed patient capacity, reduce emergency department bottlenecks and provide families with more timely, comprehensive mental health support.
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For families who have waited too long for care, the new hospital represents the thing that is needed most right now: hope. “We know this facility is going to impact so many children and families – it’s going to save lives across the region,” says Lindsey Stephenson, president of KVC Missouri. “It is incredibly meaningful to be able to meet such a critical need.”
The urgency behind that statement is overwhelmingly supported. St. Louis currently has less than half of the pediatric mental health beds needed to meet demand, a shortage that often causes children to wait several days or longer in emergency departments for appropriate care.
“The lack of inpatient capacity means children are spending too much time in emergency rooms without receiving the treatment they need,” says Trisha Lolo, president of St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “This hospital helps bridge a critical gap for families in our community.”
Dealing with a crisis of this scale requires much more cooperation than expansion. Recognizing that the demand for pediatric mental health care far exceeded its capacity, St. Louis Children’s Hospital began a national search for a partner with deep expertise in youth behavioral health, ultimately connecting with KVC Health Systems, a national leader that already operates multiple inpatient mental health hospitals for children.
“We knew we wanted to do something on a much larger scale,” says Lolo. “And we knew there were experts out there who had already done this work – and done it well.”
When it opens in late 2026, the hospital will serve children and adolescents ages 6–18 and provide four levels of care—acute inpatient treatment, psychiatric residential care, partial hospitalization, and intensive outpatient services. Together, those services form a full continuum designed to meet children where they are, whether they need immediate stabilization or long-term support closer to home.
“Not every child needs the same level of care, but every child needs the right care at the right time,” says Stephenson. “This allows us to quickly assess kids and connect them with what will help them most.”
For many families in the area, limited options mean traveling long distances for care or leaving families waiting in emergency rooms. Leaders say the new facility is designed to change that by placing children in familiar surroundings, closer to their families and communities, where treatment can happen more effectively.
“We want children to receive care in the communities where they live,” says Stephenson. “When you’re talking about treatment, familiarity and comfort really matter.”
Unlike traditional hospital settings, the new mental health facility is being intentionally designed to be less clinical and more like a place where children can simply be themselves. Located at KVC since long time Children’s Mental Welfare Complex In Webster Groves (330 N. Gore), the hospital will be surrounded by nature and neighborhood life – details that leaders say are important to healing.
“These facilities are intentionally designed to let kids be kids,” Lolo says. “They need space to move their bodies, get outside, and feel a sense of normalcy — even while receiving care.”
From outdoor spaces to thoughtfully planned interiors, every detail is being considered from the perspective of safety, comfort and dignity. “We constantly ask ourselves, ‘Would I feel comfortable bringing my child here at his or her most vulnerable moment?'” says Stephenson. “If the answer is no, we fix it.”
One of the defining characteristics of the hospital is the coming together of expertise in a single, coordinated campus. KVC Health Systems Specialist, camber mental health, Washoe Medicineand St. Louis Children’s Hospital will collaborate to provide comprehensive, seamless care, reducing the need for families to navigate multiple systems during the crisis.
“Instead of parents having to go to several different organizations to get the right care, all that expertise is happening in one place,” says Stephenson. “Each partner brings deep experience, and together we can focus on delivering the best outcomes for children and families.”
This model allows physicians to focus on what they do best, while families benefit from rapid assessment, coordinated treatment plans, and seamless transitions between levels of care.
While construction is underway, leaders say community support is essential. The project has received major contributions from the state of Missouri, KVC Health Systems and St. Louis Children’s Hospital, but still needs an additional $24 million in philanthropic funding to fully bring the hospital to life.
As construction continues toward opening in late 2026, the leaders behind the project hope the hospital is a lasting promise to families across the region that when a child is struggling, help is close, compassionate and real.
“The message we want families to hear is simple,” says Lolo. “We see you, we hear you – and there is hope.”

