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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Sponsored:
BLK BOX – Reshaping strength

Greg Bradley looks at the shift towards strength training in gyms and advises on how operators can create the ultimate training environment

Published in Health Club Management 2026 issue 5
Solo60 needs to create a full-service training space in a small footprint
Solo60 needs to create a full-service training space in a small footprint / BLK BOX

Although gym floor demand has shifted towards free-weights, racks, cables and functional training zones, many facilities are still planned around a cardio-led model of use.

That gap matters. When layouts fail to reflect how members train, capacity becomes harder to manage, the customer experience becomes less consistent and valuable space underperforms.

The opportunity lies in how the space is planned, so layout, flow, zoning, storage, flooring and acoustics all work together. In many health and fitness clubs, the pressure shows up quickly: overcrowded racks, busy dumbbell zones, congested walkways and members waiting for key pieces of kit.

The natural response is to add more equipment, but that only works if the space can support it.

Greg Bradley
Greg Bradley / BLK BOX

Strength training kit no longer sits in a corner of the gym. It’s the main reason many members join, visit and stay

The right zoning

Strength training places different demands on a gym floor. It’s less linear than cardio. Members move between racks, benches, cables, dumbbells and open floor space. They share equipment, rest between sets and often train in small groups. That means layout, flow and zoning matter just as much as the equipment itself.

This is where operators need to look at the gym floor as one connected ecosystem where all elements are interdependent.

Racks, cables and storage can’t be planned in isolation. Storage, for example, is often treated as a background detail, but when it’s positioned properly, it can reduce clutter, improve flow and make the space feel more professionally managed. In some cases, storage can double as functional training equipment, helping operators get more value from the same footprint.

Meeting mixed demand

We see this across a wide range of projects. For high-footfall operators such as PureGym, the challenge is often capacity: how to allow more members to train at once without making the space feel crowded. For Nuffield Health, the requirement is often broader, supporting everyone from general fitness users to those following more structured strength programmes. In mixed-use destinations such as Solo60, the priority is creating a full-service training environment delivered in a small footprint.

The common thread is that good design has to remove friction. A well-planned functional or free-weights area shouldn’t feel cramped or intimidating; there needs to be space to move and clear guidance on where equipment should be stored when it’s not in use. It should reduce waiting time, improve safety and allow the floor to flex between individual training, group training and PT sessions.

It’s important that operators create evergreen, future-proofed spaces that can adapt as training styles evolve. Done well, modern gym design improves more than appearance. It supports capacity, member confidence, flexible training styles and retention.

Members are more likely to return to spaces that feel easy to use, well organised and culturally relevant – spaces that reflect how people want to train now, without becoming obsolete when the next trend in fitness takes hold.

Strength training should no longer be confined to a corner of the gym. For many operators, it’s one of the main reasons members join, visit and stay. If strength training isn’t front and centre of your member offering, you’re falling behind. 

More: www.blkboxfitness.com

Busy clubs like PureGym have to manage capacity
Busy clubs like PureGym have to manage capacity / BLK BOX
Strength solutions
Greg’s advice

Members’ needs can usually be met with better layout, flow design and zoning

Don’t meet increased demand by just adding more strength machines, especially if the footprint is limited

Well-planned layout can create a space that flexes between training with friends, training alone and doing personal training

Clever storage can eliminate a cramped feel

Some storage can serve as functional training equipment where space is at a premium

Read more from this issue of HCM magazine

View contents of HCM 2026 issue 5
Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
Greg Bradley looks at the shift towards strength training in gyms and advises on how operators can create the ultimate training environment
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Strength training has moved from the margins to the mainstream.
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features

Sponsored:
BLK BOX – Reshaping strength

Greg Bradley looks at the shift towards strength training in gyms and advises on how operators can create the ultimate training environment

Published in Health Club Management 2026 issue 5
Solo60 needs to create a full-service training space in a small footprint
Solo60 needs to create a full-service training space in a small footprint / BLK BOX

Although gym floor demand has shifted towards free-weights, racks, cables and functional training zones, many facilities are still planned around a cardio-led model of use.

That gap matters. When layouts fail to reflect how members train, capacity becomes harder to manage, the customer experience becomes less consistent and valuable space underperforms.

The opportunity lies in how the space is planned, so layout, flow, zoning, storage, flooring and acoustics all work together. In many health and fitness clubs, the pressure shows up quickly: overcrowded racks, busy dumbbell zones, congested walkways and members waiting for key pieces of kit.

The natural response is to add more equipment, but that only works if the space can support it.

Greg Bradley
Greg Bradley / BLK BOX

Strength training kit no longer sits in a corner of the gym. It’s the main reason many members join, visit and stay

The right zoning

Strength training places different demands on a gym floor. It’s less linear than cardio. Members move between racks, benches, cables, dumbbells and open floor space. They share equipment, rest between sets and often train in small groups. That means layout, flow and zoning matter just as much as the equipment itself.

This is where operators need to look at the gym floor as one connected ecosystem where all elements are interdependent.

Racks, cables and storage can’t be planned in isolation. Storage, for example, is often treated as a background detail, but when it’s positioned properly, it can reduce clutter, improve flow and make the space feel more professionally managed. In some cases, storage can double as functional training equipment, helping operators get more value from the same footprint.

Meeting mixed demand

We see this across a wide range of projects. For high-footfall operators such as PureGym, the challenge is often capacity: how to allow more members to train at once without making the space feel crowded. For Nuffield Health, the requirement is often broader, supporting everyone from general fitness users to those following more structured strength programmes. In mixed-use destinations such as Solo60, the priority is creating a full-service training environment delivered in a small footprint.

The common thread is that good design has to remove friction. A well-planned functional or free-weights area shouldn’t feel cramped or intimidating; there needs to be space to move and clear guidance on where equipment should be stored when it’s not in use. It should reduce waiting time, improve safety and allow the floor to flex between individual training, group training and PT sessions.

It’s important that operators create evergreen, future-proofed spaces that can adapt as training styles evolve. Done well, modern gym design improves more than appearance. It supports capacity, member confidence, flexible training styles and retention.

Members are more likely to return to spaces that feel easy to use, well organised and culturally relevant – spaces that reflect how people want to train now, without becoming obsolete when the next trend in fitness takes hold.

Strength training should no longer be confined to a corner of the gym. For many operators, it’s one of the main reasons members join, visit and stay. If strength training isn’t front and centre of your member offering, you’re falling behind. 

More: www.blkboxfitness.com

Busy clubs like PureGym have to manage capacity
Busy clubs like PureGym have to manage capacity / BLK BOX
Strength solutions
Greg’s advice

Members’ needs can usually be met with better layout, flow design and zoning

Don’t meet increased demand by just adding more strength machines, especially if the footprint is limited

Well-planned layout can create a space that flexes between training with friends, training alone and doing personal training

Clever storage can eliminate a cramped feel

Some storage can serve as functional training equipment where space is at a premium

Read more from this issue of HCM magazine

View contents of HCM 2026 issue 5
Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
Greg Bradley looks at the shift towards strength training in gyms and advises on how operators can create the ultimate training environment
Latest News
London-based high-performance fitness club, ONE LDN, is raising funds for a multi-site expansion across London, ...
Latest News
A new brain clinic has opened in London, which uses non-invasive brain stimulation to treat ...
Latest News
Good Boost’s digital exercise programmes are helping adults with MSK at a lower cost than ...
Latest News
With Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, announcing his resignation this morning and Andy Burnham as a ...
Latest News
Koru Health Club launched recently within Luxembourg’s multi-experience destination, GRID X, which combines culture, retail ...
Latest News
Celebrating its 10th anniversary, Elevate has had its busiest show to date, with almost 200 ...
Latest News
A new report from Your Personal Training (YPT) suggests UK gym operators could be missing ...
Latest News
Eighty-four per cent of consumers now say wellness is a top priority in their lives, ...
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Elevate Arena is underway at London's Excel and the hot topic of AI was the ...
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PureGym Group has announced that group chief financial officer, Alex Wood, is taking over the ...
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Independent operator, Fitness Worx Gyms, is introducing private blood testing as a service to members. ...
Opinion
promotion
Strength training has moved from the margins to the mainstream.
Opinion: Building smarter strength spaces for today’s operators
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Cornerstone Connect helps Active Blackpool tackle health inequalities
Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Elevate 2026 to mark 10-year anniversary with biggest ever waterfront drinks reception
Elevate is set to celebrate its 10th anniversary in style this June, with organisers confirming the event’s largest-ever drinks reception as registrations continue to run more than 10% ahead of last year.
Company profiles
Company profile: Perfect Gym Solutions S.A.
Perfect Gym, part of the Sport Alliance group, is a global software provider specialising in ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Future Fit
Since 1993, Future Fit have been consistently raising the bar when it comes to training ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - Future-proofing
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Pulse Fitness press release: Pulse Fitness’ Trakk ecosystem supports Walsall Leisure in driving community engagement and delivering measurable ROI
Pulse Fitness’ digital solution, Trakk, is helping Walsall Council transform community health engagement into measurable outcomes by combining body composition tracking with targeted physical activity interventions.
Featured press releases
Dyaco UK Ltd press release: Exploring the core of i-Strength: How four digital resistance modes unlock personalised training for everyone
Spirit Fitness built the i-Strength adaptive strength training system around four distinct workout modes.
Directory
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Industrial washing machines
Miele Company Limited: Industrial washing machines
Spa and beauty equipment
Living Earth Crafts: Spa and beauty equipment
Property & Tenders
Stratford, East London.
Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Property & Tenders
Y Felinheli, LL56 4QN
Newmark
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
22-23 Jun 2026
WX Wakefield , Wakefield, United Kingdom
Diary dates
21-24 Sep 2026
The Langham Huntington Pasadena , Pasadena, United States
Diary dates
06-08 Oct 2026
Messe Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
22-22 Oct 2026
QEII Conference Centre, London,
Diary dates
26-29 Oct 2027
Koelnmesse Exhibition Centre, Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
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