Follow Health Club Management on Twitter Like Health Club Management on Facebook Join the discussion with Health Club Management on LinkedIn
FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Inclusive fitness: Fit for the job

The Aspire National Training Centre is an exemplar of inclusive fitness: not only are almost a third of its members disabled, but well over half of its gym instructors are too. Now a scheme to get more disabled people into fitness careers is gathering momentum. Rhianon Howells reports

By Rhianon Howells | Published in Health Club Management 2014 issue 6
An instructor who has an impairment can be a real asset – not despite, but because of, their experience of disability and their ability to reach out to others

Given its location in the grounds of the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore, north-west London, it may at first seem unsurprising that the Aspire National Training Centre (ANTC) caters so well for the needs of disabled people.

Founded in 1982, it was originally conceived as a rehab centre for patients at the hospital’s world-class spinal unit, but quickly evolved into something much more groundbreaking: a fully accessible leisure centre to meet the needs not only of those with spinal injuries, but people of all backgrounds and levels of ability.

More than three decades later, both the centre and the charity, Aspire, which was set up to run it remain committed to this inclusive ideal: 30 per cent of ANTC’s 3,000-strong membership is disabled (compared to a national average of 2–3 per cent) while the remaining 70 per cent is not. A further 2,000 registered users visit the centre on an ad hoc basis.

According to centre manager Hannah Bladon, ANTC’s success in attracting disabled customers can be attributed to a number of factors: its impressive array of accessible facilities and classes (see below); its partnership with the London Spinal Cord Injury Centre, whose patients use the facility for rehab and also receive in-patient memberships for the duration of their stay; and a proactive outreach programme, including exercise referrals.

Leading by example
A large part of the centre’s appeal to disabled customers – and crucial in retaining them – is its employment policy. At present, just over 20 per cent of ANTC’s entire workforce and around 60 per cent of its 20-strong fitness team (including full-time employees, cover staff and volunteers) has a disability.

What’s more, says Bladon, those figures are achieved without positive discrimination: “We don’t actively recruit for disabled staff, but because of who we are and what we do, we probably get more applications from disabled people. They know the facility is accessible, they’ll be welcome and have as good a chance of getting the job as anyone else.”

To accommodate disabled employees, the staff room is fully accessible and some do work shorter days – but mostly, few allowances need to be made. On the flip side, there are enormous benefits to employing disabled fitness instructors, not least in reassuring disabled customers that their needs will be understood and catered for.

Disabled fitness instructors also give a more human face to the gym environment, making it less intimidating not only for disabled users but also for older and deconditioned populations (more than half of ANTC’s registered users are aged over 50). “Our disabled instructors have life experience. They can turn people around,” says Bladon. “They can say, ‘I’ve been through this and look where I am now. You don’t think you can do it, but you can’.”

Industry education
But if ANTC is at the forefront of the drive to make fitness and fitness careers more accessible to disabled people, it’s clear the rest of the industry is still lagging behind.

For starters, the percentage of disabled members in fitness facilities remains disproportionately low (17 per cent of the general population has a disability). Further to this, Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking work in the fitness industry. According to research published by the charity in 2011, a wheelchair user is twice as likely to receive an outright rejection when applying for a job in the fitness profession, all other factors being equal. Meanwhile, a non-wheelchair user is nearly four times as likely to be invited for an interview.

One way that Aspire is working to redress this imbalance is through its involvement with Quest, Sport England’s national quality scheme for sport and leisure. ANTC has been Quest-accredited since 2012 (it currently has an ‘excellent’ rating) and, through regular involvement with the scheme’s annual conference and other events, the charity is able to raise awareness among fellow operators and provide a benchmark against which they can measure their own efforts to cater for disabled users. “Quest enables us to share the inclusive nature of our facility with other general managers and to broaden their horizons as to how they can further promote activity to disabled people,” explains Bladon.

But most crucial of all to Aspire’s drive to educate the wider industry is its Sport England-funded InstructAbility scheme. Set up and managed by Aspire in partnership with training provider YMCAfit, the initiative offers free training to unemployed disabled people with a view to helping them gain qualifications, experience and eventually employment as fitness instructors.

Created in 2010 but just now gathering momentum, the programme includes an 18-day training course for up to 12 students, delivered over seven weeks and leading to a CYQ Level 2 Certificate in Gym Instructing as well as a CYQ Level 3 disability and exercise qualification. This is followed by a 12-week work placement within a leisure centre or private health club.

While YMCAfit delivers the fitness training in Inclusive Fitness Initiative (IFI)-accredited venues, Aspire provides each student with a mentor to support them through the process; delivers community outreach training aimed at providing students with the knowledge, skills and resources to engage disabled people in the local community; and works with other industry operators to set up and facilitate work placements.

Made possible by an £850,000 grant from Sport England’s Places People Play initiative, the first InstructAbility courses were held in London but have since been offered across southern, eastern and central England, with plans to roll out the scheme in northern regions next year. To date, 90 people have qualified as fitness instructors through the scheme, with impairments ranging from spinal cord injury, spina bifida and cerebral palsy to visual impairment, missing limbs and loss of function caused by stroke, brain injury and neuro-muscular disease.

According to Hilary Farmiloe, national project manager for InstructAbility, the scheme was set up to tackle the under-representation of disabled people in the fitness industry, both as employees and users. “InstructAbility is not just a project, it’s a movement, and I believe the army of disabled people we’re equipping to work in the fitness industry will provide a legacy of lasting change.

“Our long-term aim is to influence fitness training providers and leisure operators to the extent that an intervention like InstructAbility will no longer be required.

“When disabled people have more role models within the industry and no longer face physical and attitudinal barriers to accessing training and employment, we will have succeeded.”

The key to success, adds Farmiloe, is buy-in from the industry, and feedback from operators with whom the scheme has partnerships – including GLL, Fusion, Everyone Active, DC Leisure and Fitness First – has invariably been extremely positive. “We regularly hear how an InstructAbility student has raised awareness of disability among other staff and, in some cases, helped the centre make small adjustments to improve their accessibility,” she says. “Managers have also reported an impact on retention of current customers, as well as an increase in the number of disabled people using the facility.”

Quest for excellence
Recently, InstructAbility received a boost from the Quest quality scheme for leisure centre operators, which has announced the addition of a compulsory Community Outcomes module to its assessment process, starting this summer. “If a centre can show it’s supporting disabled people, encouraging them to participate in sport and fitness, this will certainly help them do well in our new module,” says Caroline Constantine, Quest operations director.

“One of module’s key aims is to make sure that Quest-accredited operators are reaching out to people from all backgrounds and levels of ability, including those who might traditionally have felt they didn’t belong in this kind of environment. Taking part in an inclusive scheme such as InstructAbility and/or employing disabled staff is a great way for operators to demonstrate their commitment to this goal.”

Farmiloe agrees: “I’m delighted that Quest is supporting InstructAbility and recognises how the programme can support centres in their drive to do well in the Community Outcomes Module, while also encouraging greater diversity in their workforce and customer base.” 

However, there’s still education to be done to get more operators on board, particularly in the private sector.

Central to the InstructAbility concept is the role of the disabled fitness instructor as an ambassador for inclusivity – with their unique ability to relate to disabled users as well as other hard-to-reach groups in the community – and it’s this message that Farmiloe is keen to push.

“Operators often respond by saying they don’t do work placements or accept volunteers,” she says. “But we want them to realise there’s a business case to answer, because if they want to remain competitive, they can’t keep focusing only on the clients they have.

“It’s about making the industry understand that an instructor who has an impairment can be a real asset – not despite, but because of, their experience of disability and their ability to reach out to others.”

THE ASPIRE NATIONAL TRAINING CENTRE

The centre’s wide range of accessible facilities and services include:

- IFI-approved gym with a full range of equipment that can be adapted for wheelchair and non-wheelchair users.

- Swimming pool with full ramp access, removing the need for wheelchair hoists; water temperature maintained at 30–32ºC – ideal for the very young, old or those with temperature-sensitive conditions.

- 52 fitness classes, of which at least 40 per cent are suitable for disabled users; popular inclusive options include yoga, pilates, Zumba, aquatherapy and Schwinn group cycling, which offers four hand-cycles – Kranks – alongside 12 regular bikes.

- The Passport to Leisure membership option, which entitles disabled users to one-on-one assisted exercise sessions.

The water temperature in the pool is maintained at 30–32ºC
The water temperature in the pool is maintained at 30–32ºC
Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Well over half of Aspire’s gym instructors have a disability
Well over half of Aspire’s gym instructors have a disability
Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking jobs in fitness
Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking jobs in fitness
Thirty per cent of members at Aspire’s centre in Stanmore are disabled
Thirty per cent of members at Aspire’s centre in Stanmore are disabled
Disabled instructors can be role models for prospective disabled clients
Disabled instructors can be role models for prospective disabled clients
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/HCM2014_6inclusive.jpg
A scheme to get more disabled people into fitness careers, created by the charity behind the Aspire National Training Centre, is gathering pace. Rhianon Howells reports
Rhianon Howells, Journalist,Aspire National Training Centre, inclusive fitness, gym instructors, Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital
HCM magazine
If the health service is to survive, we must recognise that it is a disease service – and that wellbeing rests with us, says the activity advocate and healthy ageing champion. He talks to Kate Cracknell
HCM magazine
Raphael Cuomo explores the powerful link between addiction, health and behaviour change
HCM magazine
As the entrepreneur who started Wexer, Fresh Fitness, Fitness DK and Repeat, as well as being a former elite athlete, Rasmus Ingerslev’s life looked perfect from the outside, but onthe inside it was a different story. He talks to Kath Hudson about healing old wounds
HCM magazine
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
HCM magazine
HCM People

Stephen Price

Founder, SP&Co Group
Working in public health over the last few years has lit up parts of my brain again
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
SnowDome Fitness has added 50 per cent more space with cutting-edge Technogym solutions
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Starpool supports Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs, says Riccardo Turri
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Find out how your gym can tap into the corporate wellness boom
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Third Space partnered with IndigoFitness to deliver a bespoke training space for its new club at The Whiteley
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Greg Bradley looks at the shift towards strength training in gyms and advises on how operators can create the ultimate training environment
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
David Lloyd is stepping up its commitment to women’s health as it continues to explore what fit-for-purpose looks like for the female population
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
EGYM has opened a new HQ in Paternoster Square, London and revealed a range of new launches
HCM promotional features
Promotion
Performance Health Systems, manufacturer of Power Plate, has a new CEO, with an ambitious vision for the company
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
The industry is embracing consumer-facing tech. Now it’s time to streamline back-of-house systems with Orbit4, says Daniel Jones
HCM promotional features
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, ...
Latest News
Elevate Arena is underway at London's Excel and the hot topic of AI was the ...
Latest News
PureGym Group has announced that group chief financial officer, Alex Wood, is taking over the ...
Latest News
Independent operator, Fitness Worx Gyms, is introducing private blood testing as a service to members. ...
Latest News
International industry lobbying associations are calling for physical activity and strength training to be deeply ...
Latest News
Global group exercise specialist, Les Mills, is inviting operators to sign up to its Workout ...
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: Les Mills UK
Every week, millions of people get fit in 21,000 clubs, across 100 countries with the ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Kodobi Ltd
Running a fast-paced fitness business while ensuring safety and compliance is no easy feat. That’s ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - From nightclub to health club
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - Future-proofing
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Create PT press release: Create sets a new standard with its new personal training diploma
Create's new Personal Training Diploma is built on the depth, real-client practice and coaching judgement that turn a qualification into genuine readiness - taught as one continuous course so that every skill is reinforced and applied, not cleared once and forgotten.
Featured press releases
Leisure Energy press release: Studley Leisure Centre solar panel installation project begins
Stratford-on-Avon District Council is delighted to announce a new solar panel installation project at Studley Leisure Centre, marking an important step towards improving the sustainability of this valued community facility.
Directory
Spa and beauty equipment
Living Earth Crafts: Spa and beauty equipment
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Industrial washing machines
Miele Company Limited: Industrial washing machines
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

features

Inclusive fitness: Fit for the job

The Aspire National Training Centre is an exemplar of inclusive fitness: not only are almost a third of its members disabled, but well over half of its gym instructors are too. Now a scheme to get more disabled people into fitness careers is gathering momentum. Rhianon Howells reports

By Rhianon Howells | Published in Health Club Management 2014 issue 6
An instructor who has an impairment can be a real asset – not despite, but because of, their experience of disability and their ability to reach out to others

Given its location in the grounds of the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore, north-west London, it may at first seem unsurprising that the Aspire National Training Centre (ANTC) caters so well for the needs of disabled people.

Founded in 1982, it was originally conceived as a rehab centre for patients at the hospital’s world-class spinal unit, but quickly evolved into something much more groundbreaking: a fully accessible leisure centre to meet the needs not only of those with spinal injuries, but people of all backgrounds and levels of ability.

More than three decades later, both the centre and the charity, Aspire, which was set up to run it remain committed to this inclusive ideal: 30 per cent of ANTC’s 3,000-strong membership is disabled (compared to a national average of 2–3 per cent) while the remaining 70 per cent is not. A further 2,000 registered users visit the centre on an ad hoc basis.

According to centre manager Hannah Bladon, ANTC’s success in attracting disabled customers can be attributed to a number of factors: its impressive array of accessible facilities and classes (see below); its partnership with the London Spinal Cord Injury Centre, whose patients use the facility for rehab and also receive in-patient memberships for the duration of their stay; and a proactive outreach programme, including exercise referrals.

Leading by example
A large part of the centre’s appeal to disabled customers – and crucial in retaining them – is its employment policy. At present, just over 20 per cent of ANTC’s entire workforce and around 60 per cent of its 20-strong fitness team (including full-time employees, cover staff and volunteers) has a disability.

What’s more, says Bladon, those figures are achieved without positive discrimination: “We don’t actively recruit for disabled staff, but because of who we are and what we do, we probably get more applications from disabled people. They know the facility is accessible, they’ll be welcome and have as good a chance of getting the job as anyone else.”

To accommodate disabled employees, the staff room is fully accessible and some do work shorter days – but mostly, few allowances need to be made. On the flip side, there are enormous benefits to employing disabled fitness instructors, not least in reassuring disabled customers that their needs will be understood and catered for.

Disabled fitness instructors also give a more human face to the gym environment, making it less intimidating not only for disabled users but also for older and deconditioned populations (more than half of ANTC’s registered users are aged over 50). “Our disabled instructors have life experience. They can turn people around,” says Bladon. “They can say, ‘I’ve been through this and look where I am now. You don’t think you can do it, but you can’.”

Industry education
But if ANTC is at the forefront of the drive to make fitness and fitness careers more accessible to disabled people, it’s clear the rest of the industry is still lagging behind.

For starters, the percentage of disabled members in fitness facilities remains disproportionately low (17 per cent of the general population has a disability). Further to this, Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking work in the fitness industry. According to research published by the charity in 2011, a wheelchair user is twice as likely to receive an outright rejection when applying for a job in the fitness profession, all other factors being equal. Meanwhile, a non-wheelchair user is nearly four times as likely to be invited for an interview.

One way that Aspire is working to redress this imbalance is through its involvement with Quest, Sport England’s national quality scheme for sport and leisure. ANTC has been Quest-accredited since 2012 (it currently has an ‘excellent’ rating) and, through regular involvement with the scheme’s annual conference and other events, the charity is able to raise awareness among fellow operators and provide a benchmark against which they can measure their own efforts to cater for disabled users. “Quest enables us to share the inclusive nature of our facility with other general managers and to broaden their horizons as to how they can further promote activity to disabled people,” explains Bladon.

But most crucial of all to Aspire’s drive to educate the wider industry is its Sport England-funded InstructAbility scheme. Set up and managed by Aspire in partnership with training provider YMCAfit, the initiative offers free training to unemployed disabled people with a view to helping them gain qualifications, experience and eventually employment as fitness instructors.

Created in 2010 but just now gathering momentum, the programme includes an 18-day training course for up to 12 students, delivered over seven weeks and leading to a CYQ Level 2 Certificate in Gym Instructing as well as a CYQ Level 3 disability and exercise qualification. This is followed by a 12-week work placement within a leisure centre or private health club.

While YMCAfit delivers the fitness training in Inclusive Fitness Initiative (IFI)-accredited venues, Aspire provides each student with a mentor to support them through the process; delivers community outreach training aimed at providing students with the knowledge, skills and resources to engage disabled people in the local community; and works with other industry operators to set up and facilitate work placements.

Made possible by an £850,000 grant from Sport England’s Places People Play initiative, the first InstructAbility courses were held in London but have since been offered across southern, eastern and central England, with plans to roll out the scheme in northern regions next year. To date, 90 people have qualified as fitness instructors through the scheme, with impairments ranging from spinal cord injury, spina bifida and cerebral palsy to visual impairment, missing limbs and loss of function caused by stroke, brain injury and neuro-muscular disease.

According to Hilary Farmiloe, national project manager for InstructAbility, the scheme was set up to tackle the under-representation of disabled people in the fitness industry, both as employees and users. “InstructAbility is not just a project, it’s a movement, and I believe the army of disabled people we’re equipping to work in the fitness industry will provide a legacy of lasting change.

“Our long-term aim is to influence fitness training providers and leisure operators to the extent that an intervention like InstructAbility will no longer be required.

“When disabled people have more role models within the industry and no longer face physical and attitudinal barriers to accessing training and employment, we will have succeeded.”

The key to success, adds Farmiloe, is buy-in from the industry, and feedback from operators with whom the scheme has partnerships – including GLL, Fusion, Everyone Active, DC Leisure and Fitness First – has invariably been extremely positive. “We regularly hear how an InstructAbility student has raised awareness of disability among other staff and, in some cases, helped the centre make small adjustments to improve their accessibility,” she says. “Managers have also reported an impact on retention of current customers, as well as an increase in the number of disabled people using the facility.”

Quest for excellence
Recently, InstructAbility received a boost from the Quest quality scheme for leisure centre operators, which has announced the addition of a compulsory Community Outcomes module to its assessment process, starting this summer. “If a centre can show it’s supporting disabled people, encouraging them to participate in sport and fitness, this will certainly help them do well in our new module,” says Caroline Constantine, Quest operations director.

“One of module’s key aims is to make sure that Quest-accredited operators are reaching out to people from all backgrounds and levels of ability, including those who might traditionally have felt they didn’t belong in this kind of environment. Taking part in an inclusive scheme such as InstructAbility and/or employing disabled staff is a great way for operators to demonstrate their commitment to this goal.”

Farmiloe agrees: “I’m delighted that Quest is supporting InstructAbility and recognises how the programme can support centres in their drive to do well in the Community Outcomes Module, while also encouraging greater diversity in their workforce and customer base.” 

However, there’s still education to be done to get more operators on board, particularly in the private sector.

Central to the InstructAbility concept is the role of the disabled fitness instructor as an ambassador for inclusivity – with their unique ability to relate to disabled users as well as other hard-to-reach groups in the community – and it’s this message that Farmiloe is keen to push.

“Operators often respond by saying they don’t do work placements or accept volunteers,” she says. “But we want them to realise there’s a business case to answer, because if they want to remain competitive, they can’t keep focusing only on the clients they have.

“It’s about making the industry understand that an instructor who has an impairment can be a real asset – not despite, but because of, their experience of disability and their ability to reach out to others.”

THE ASPIRE NATIONAL TRAINING CENTRE

The centre’s wide range of accessible facilities and services include:

- IFI-approved gym with a full range of equipment that can be adapted for wheelchair and non-wheelchair users.

- Swimming pool with full ramp access, removing the need for wheelchair hoists; water temperature maintained at 30–32ºC – ideal for the very young, old or those with temperature-sensitive conditions.

- 52 fitness classes, of which at least 40 per cent are suitable for disabled users; popular inclusive options include yoga, pilates, Zumba, aquatherapy and Schwinn group cycling, which offers four hand-cycles – Kranks – alongside 12 regular bikes.

- The Passport to Leisure membership option, which entitles disabled users to one-on-one assisted exercise sessions.

The water temperature in the pool is maintained at 30–32ºC
The water temperature in the pool is maintained at 30–32ºC
Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Well over half of Aspire’s gym instructors have a disability
Well over half of Aspire’s gym instructors have a disability
Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking jobs in fitness
Aspire has identified active discrimination against disabled people seeking jobs in fitness
Thirty per cent of members at Aspire’s centre in Stanmore are disabled
Thirty per cent of members at Aspire’s centre in Stanmore are disabled
Disabled instructors can be role models for prospective disabled clients
Disabled instructors can be role models for prospective disabled clients
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/HCM2014_6inclusive.jpg
A scheme to get more disabled people into fitness careers, created by the charity behind the Aspire National Training Centre, is gathering pace. Rhianon Howells reports
Rhianon Howells, Journalist,Aspire National Training Centre, inclusive fitness, gym instructors, Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital
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, ...
Latest News
Elevate Arena is underway at London's Excel and the hot topic of AI was the ...
Latest News
PureGym Group has announced that group chief financial officer, Alex Wood, is taking over the ...
Latest News
Independent operator, Fitness Worx Gyms, is introducing private blood testing as a service to members. ...
Latest News
International industry lobbying associations are calling for physical activity and strength training to be deeply ...
Latest News
Global group exercise specialist, Les Mills, is inviting operators to sign up to its Workout ...
Latest News
Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider, HUM2N, to launch ...
Latest News
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, is gearing up to unveil its most significant redevelopment ...
Latest News
Researchers in the US have identified an antibody which could greatly reduce the loss of ...
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: Les Mills UK
Every week, millions of people get fit in 21,000 clubs, across 100 countries with the ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Kodobi Ltd
Running a fast-paced fitness business while ensuring safety and compliance is no easy feat. That’s ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - From nightclub to health club
Supplier Showcases
Supplier Showcase - Future-proofing
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Create PT press release: Create sets a new standard with its new personal training diploma
Create's new Personal Training Diploma is built on the depth, real-client practice and coaching judgement that turn a qualification into genuine readiness - taught as one continuous course so that every skill is reinforced and applied, not cleared once and forgotten.
Featured press releases
Leisure Energy press release: Studley Leisure Centre solar panel installation project begins
Stratford-on-Avon District Council is delighted to announce a new solar panel installation project at Studley Leisure Centre, marking an important step towards improving the sustainability of this valued community facility.
Directory
Spa and beauty equipment
Living Earth Crafts: Spa and beauty equipment
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Industrial washing machines
Miele Company Limited: Industrial washing machines
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
Search news, features & products:
Find a supplier:
Partner sites