Friday, September 9, 2011

What would you like to see in a fitness studio?

I am designing a fitness studio and am looking for some cool idea. What are things you always missed having in one? What are your favorites in existing ones? And what would you improve?|||Rowing machines. Some people look for a toned body and all muscles exercised rather than bulking up.|||Primary- The whole line of dumbells from light weight to heavy, adjustable benches, military press, bench press, incline and decline bench press. smith machine, power station. kettlebells, padded area for abs and pushups. pull up and dip bar, treadmills, bikes, eliptical.





secondary-Work out machines for all muscles, have some calve machines too. heavy puching bad, speed bag, stairmasters are amazing but no one uses them. ab machines. plyometric steps and bands. one of those machines with cables and adjustable weights with all the bells and whistles. Row machine for back.|||space





Don't cram in so much that you don't have room to use the equipment, and leave room for people to stretch and skip.





Roman chair and weighted row, people don't work their lower back enough





press up handles and a couple of step aerobic steps





swiss ball





heavy bags





full set of dumbells|||More and smaller class sizes. Being in the back row with 25 other people makes it tough to see the instructor.





And pay attention to the lighting; every place I've been to has so much glaring fluorescent lighting. Create a little atmosphere.|||Skipping ropes, You need a big ceiling because the one i went to had a low ceiling and i kept hitting it all the time with the rope.|||This is the martial arts section, not the health club adviser. Why ask here? Martial arts are about learning self-defense.|||A real, olympic sized pool. A real running track (like the one at Bally's in Clear Lake/Webster, TX). Clean toilets, sinks, showers etc. Enough lockers. Fewer people who want to talk to me when I am working out.|||Olympic-sized swimming pool %26amp; a huge weight room!|||machines that isolate each arm and leg to allow for equal strength building.

No comments:

Post a Comment