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

Latest news

Hospitality leaders gather in Paris to discuss longevity

The Longevity in Hospitality Event was organised by FIBO and its parent company RX
Consultants Andrew Gibson and Franz Linser presented the conference and shared their thoughts
Speakers discussed what longevity means for design, investment and operation of hospitality settings, including spas and dining venues

FIBO and its parent company RX have convened a high-level seminar recently called Longevity in Hospitality.

The event was held at La Fondation, a recently-opened purpose-built wellness hotel in Paris, which has a climbing wall, gym, pool and spa and state-of-the-art co-working and seminar spaces. 

The day, held in December, was hosted by Anke Brendt, project manager at FIBO and Michael Köhler, CEO of RX Germany and presented by consultants Andrew Gibson and Franz Linser.

Gibson said delivering longevity in hotels is a complex matter, but that nailing the essentials – such as clean air, good sleeping conditions and access to green spaces and the support of experts should be the basis of any approach.

His definition of longevity is based on three foundations – community, agility and nourishment. 

“The best wellness or longevity retreats have 12-month waiting lists, because people book and rebook. That’s community,” he said.

“Agility is part of what you would call fitness,” he continued. “But we need to take it to the next level – it isn’t just about cardio and strength, it’s also about things such as cognition and reaction time.

“Food is an important part of nourishment, but it also includes the restoration of the body – recharge, refresh, relax, recuperate. All these words explain nourishment.

“Nourishment is also about curiosity,” said Gibson. “Hotels need to be designed to inspire people to explore and to pique their curiosity. It’s about nourishing the brain, it’s about education, contributing to community, agility and nourishment.”

Gibson called on developers to consider building wellness and longevity elements into their projects from the start, rather than trying to back-fit them shortly before opening.

He told delegates he is regularly approached to consult on new developments where the infrastructure has already been planned and is sometimes on-site.

This eliminates the opportunity to build movement into the design, to ensure bedrooms are designed to support healthy sleep, for example: “You have to start at the concept stage,” he said. “Failing this, you’re trying to apply the key pillars of wellness to a hotel that’s already existing and this isn’t optimal.”

The core of hospitality – empathy, ensuring guests eat well, sleep well and socialise well can be the core of a longevity strategy, said Linser.

If someone stays a week and they can also see experts who can help them – medical experts, psychiatrists, physical therapists and so forth – this can be very different from the way you live at home, ensuring real value is added to the stay.

Delivery depends on resources – operators might have millions to spend on medical equipment and this might work for one audience. Another might be to take a more holistic approach, with guests spending more time in nature, said Linser.

“At the Global Wellness Summit recently, one medical doctor said that more people – according to his findings and opinion – are under-rested and overworked and I think this is something we should think about,” he said.

“This can lead to a situation where people think they’re working too much, but it’s just that they don’t know how to recover and relax. They may also have a lack of stress resilience.

“Many people are living in urban areas and don’t understand the power of being in a deep natural environment or what it’s like going out of the house into a forest with clear air, where bright is brighter and dark is darker,” said Linser. “We have to get them back to the point where their workouts are harder and then the relaxation that follows is more profound and they get back to natural rhythms.

Ambition is also important, according to Linser: “It isn’t enough any more to meet minimum standards for things such as in-room humidity and air quality,” he said. “Below 30 per cent humidity, it’s not possible to sleep well, for example.

"We need to be actively promoting what we do much more as an industry. We want to enable people to work out better, eat better, relax better, sleep better and socialise better.”

Gibson said investment in longevity equipment, such as hyperbaric chambers and more medical interventions, needs to be weighed against length of stay and potential obsolescence: “If people are only staying in your hotel for a day, they’re less likely to use these services,” he said, “but if they’re staying a week, then that changes things.”

He talked about his work at the Sensei resort in Hawaii, where the longevity offering was mainly based around programming and support from specialist advisers, rather than lots of equipment, giving the example of a former US marine, who specialised in post-traumatic stress and was highly sought after by guests – high net worth individuals who already had all the standard wellness elements covered in their day to day life, so really valued the unique support he gave.

“You have to clearly understand your market,” said Gibson. “At one end will be people who will continue to smoke and eat fast food and be happy doing that. At either end are people who are fully immersed in a wellness lifestyle and have less need for longevity in hotels. The big opportunity is to be found in the middle and then you have to decide on your focus.”

Also speaking at the summit was Alexandre Pierat from Suprem Architectures who presented a range of luxury wellness, spa and longevity projects under the theme ‘From Wellness to Longevity: Rethinking Architecture's Role’, including projects for Cinq Mondes and Guerlain, as well as a concept spa for Pop Fantasy in Bali.

Regis Boudon, SVP Creative Development at BBSpa presented on the theme of Longevity in spas: a genuine opportunity or just a passing trend? He suggested investors should carefully evaluate the longevity concept they’re interested in adopting by examining the space available and the costs in areas such as staffing, where medical wellness staff can command far higher salaries, increasing the payback time and operating costs.

He presented a number of business models from 2,000sq m spas to 250sq m medical spas, saying there’s a sweet spot for investment for hotels, suggesting an investment of €250-€700k a break-even of 12-18 months and an area of 350sq m.

He also gave examples of a four-star hotel in the South of France with 80 rooms and a 400sq m spa. This property made an investment of €380k in longevity and introduced a successful four-day programme for metabolic health at a rate of €1,650 per person.

“Longevity is an opportunity for the sector,” said Boudon. “But tread carefully and make sure you make the right investments, as there are new modalities coming to market all the time and without planning, your scheme could quickly be obsolete.”

The event wrapped up with a panel discussion led by FIBO’s Emily Whigham, with Andrew Gibson, Marion Gérent – general manager at La Fondation Hotel (the venue for the event) and Dr Katharina Sepp, medical doctor at Alpinresort Sacher, which has a very high-level wellness offering called The Academy for Better Ageing.

Gibson said people who use spas in hotels spend more on F&B, stay longer and are more profitable than those who don’t, with this insight being valuable for operators seeking funding or who need to make a case for viability.

The panel agreed that most people’s priority is healthspan and living a life where they can do what they choose without limitations.

“We try not to be a hospital,” said Sepp. “Too many medical examinations can make you feel as though you're sick when you’re not. We want to give people the opportunity to do positive things for their health.

“We start with a physical examination – these days doctors rarely touch you or customise treatments. We do things differently - we personalise programmes by looking at family history and we do a physical examination so we really understand the individual.”

Alpinresort Sacher offers DNA testing so they can advise on optimum exercise and wellness routines and then evidence the impact of these wellness interventions.

“We offer all our staff the option to use the spa and longevity facilities, such as the cryotherapy," said Sepp. "That way, they can talk to the members about it.”

Sepp said Alpinresort ensures medical interventions are billed separately, so customers can charge this proportion of their stay to their insurance company.

Gérent said Interventions at La Fondation are designed to suit each person and to deliver long-term change. The hotel has already signed up 1,500 local members since it opened three months ago.

“We offer a lot of activities on site and create a lot of programmes with activities with nutrition and support from coaches and therapists giving spa treatments,” she said.

“We’re already running three aqua aerobics classes a day, due to demand,” said Gérent, although bookings in the spa treatment rooms and the climbing wall are not yet at capacity.

Gibson advised a hybrid model for operators that don’t have the capacity to invest heavily in longevity – ”Start with retreats,” said Gibson. “Run them regularly and then build from there”.

He suggested that when organising visiting practitioners for retreats, to ensure they are contracted to deliver a proportion of their classes to the in-house staff teams, advising operators to make employee wellness a cornerstone of any longevity initiative. “If the employees are happy, the guest will see that and it rubs off, so let’s start there,” he said.

FIBO 
FIBO and its parent company RX have convened a high-level seminar recently called Longevity in Hospitality.
SAB,HHR,HOT,RST,EVT
2025/THUMB-20251223175154-125.jpg
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 ...
Latest News
Peloton has made the strategic acquisition of Pilates start-up, Skōp, to support the expansion of ...
Latest News
Crunch Fitness has announced the launch of Crunch Reform Pilates – its own reformer concept ...
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
SnowDome Fitness has added 50 per cent more space with cutting-edge Technogym solutions
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
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
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
Starpool supports Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs, says Riccardo Turri
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
Active IQ is calling for greater accountability in online fitness advice with the launch of a new trustmark
HCM promotional features
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
I experienced a blissful feeling of joy I hadn’t felt since I was a kid
HCM magazine
Small improvements to sleep, diet and physical activity have major benefits for the heart, according to new research from the University of Sydney
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
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: Reaching the people most gyms miss: Bedford Gym & Swim Campaign delivers 410 new members
One of the biggest mistakes the fitness industry still makes is advertising almost exclusively to people who already look and live like gym members.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds.
Company profiles
Company profile: IndigoFitness
IndigoFitness creates bespoke training spaces for commercial, education, public-sector, and specialist clients including the MoD ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Brass Monkey
Brass Monkey designs and builds the world’s finest commercial-grade ice baths, working with leading gyms ...
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
Alliance Leisure Services (Design, Build and Fund) press release: Trowbridge pupils create lasting legacy at time capsule event
Pupils from schools across Trowbridge have come together to bury a time capsule at the site of the town’s new leisure centre, capturing a snapshot of life in 2026 for future generations.
Featured press releases
BLK BOX press release: Inside the build: Aberdeen Sports Village
When Aberdeen Sports Village set out to upgrade its gym offering, the goal was to create a more motivating, versatile and high-performing training environment for its diverse member base.
Directory
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
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
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
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

Latest news

Hospitality leaders gather in Paris to discuss longevity

The Longevity in Hospitality Event was organised by FIBO and its parent company RX
Consultants Andrew Gibson and Franz Linser presented the conference and shared their thoughts
Speakers discussed what longevity means for design, investment and operation of hospitality settings, including spas and dining venues

FIBO and its parent company RX have convened a high-level seminar recently called Longevity in Hospitality.

The event was held at La Fondation, a recently-opened purpose-built wellness hotel in Paris, which has a climbing wall, gym, pool and spa and state-of-the-art co-working and seminar spaces. 

The day, held in December, was hosted by Anke Brendt, project manager at FIBO and Michael Köhler, CEO of RX Germany and presented by consultants Andrew Gibson and Franz Linser.

Gibson said delivering longevity in hotels is a complex matter, but that nailing the essentials – such as clean air, good sleeping conditions and access to green spaces and the support of experts should be the basis of any approach.

His definition of longevity is based on three foundations – community, agility and nourishment. 

“The best wellness or longevity retreats have 12-month waiting lists, because people book and rebook. That’s community,” he said.

“Agility is part of what you would call fitness,” he continued. “But we need to take it to the next level – it isn’t just about cardio and strength, it’s also about things such as cognition and reaction time.

“Food is an important part of nourishment, but it also includes the restoration of the body – recharge, refresh, relax, recuperate. All these words explain nourishment.

“Nourishment is also about curiosity,” said Gibson. “Hotels need to be designed to inspire people to explore and to pique their curiosity. It’s about nourishing the brain, it’s about education, contributing to community, agility and nourishment.”

Gibson called on developers to consider building wellness and longevity elements into their projects from the start, rather than trying to back-fit them shortly before opening.

He told delegates he is regularly approached to consult on new developments where the infrastructure has already been planned and is sometimes on-site.

This eliminates the opportunity to build movement into the design, to ensure bedrooms are designed to support healthy sleep, for example: “You have to start at the concept stage,” he said. “Failing this, you’re trying to apply the key pillars of wellness to a hotel that’s already existing and this isn’t optimal.”

The core of hospitality – empathy, ensuring guests eat well, sleep well and socialise well can be the core of a longevity strategy, said Linser.

If someone stays a week and they can also see experts who can help them – medical experts, psychiatrists, physical therapists and so forth – this can be very different from the way you live at home, ensuring real value is added to the stay.

Delivery depends on resources – operators might have millions to spend on medical equipment and this might work for one audience. Another might be to take a more holistic approach, with guests spending more time in nature, said Linser.

“At the Global Wellness Summit recently, one medical doctor said that more people – according to his findings and opinion – are under-rested and overworked and I think this is something we should think about,” he said.

“This can lead to a situation where people think they’re working too much, but it’s just that they don’t know how to recover and relax. They may also have a lack of stress resilience.

“Many people are living in urban areas and don’t understand the power of being in a deep natural environment or what it’s like going out of the house into a forest with clear air, where bright is brighter and dark is darker,” said Linser. “We have to get them back to the point where their workouts are harder and then the relaxation that follows is more profound and they get back to natural rhythms.

Ambition is also important, according to Linser: “It isn’t enough any more to meet minimum standards for things such as in-room humidity and air quality,” he said. “Below 30 per cent humidity, it’s not possible to sleep well, for example.

"We need to be actively promoting what we do much more as an industry. We want to enable people to work out better, eat better, relax better, sleep better and socialise better.”

Gibson said investment in longevity equipment, such as hyperbaric chambers and more medical interventions, needs to be weighed against length of stay and potential obsolescence: “If people are only staying in your hotel for a day, they’re less likely to use these services,” he said, “but if they’re staying a week, then that changes things.”

He talked about his work at the Sensei resort in Hawaii, where the longevity offering was mainly based around programming and support from specialist advisers, rather than lots of equipment, giving the example of a former US marine, who specialised in post-traumatic stress and was highly sought after by guests – high net worth individuals who already had all the standard wellness elements covered in their day to day life, so really valued the unique support he gave.

“You have to clearly understand your market,” said Gibson. “At one end will be people who will continue to smoke and eat fast food and be happy doing that. At either end are people who are fully immersed in a wellness lifestyle and have less need for longevity in hotels. The big opportunity is to be found in the middle and then you have to decide on your focus.”

Also speaking at the summit was Alexandre Pierat from Suprem Architectures who presented a range of luxury wellness, spa and longevity projects under the theme ‘From Wellness to Longevity: Rethinking Architecture's Role’, including projects for Cinq Mondes and Guerlain, as well as a concept spa for Pop Fantasy in Bali.

Regis Boudon, SVP Creative Development at BBSpa presented on the theme of Longevity in spas: a genuine opportunity or just a passing trend? He suggested investors should carefully evaluate the longevity concept they’re interested in adopting by examining the space available and the costs in areas such as staffing, where medical wellness staff can command far higher salaries, increasing the payback time and operating costs.

He presented a number of business models from 2,000sq m spas to 250sq m medical spas, saying there’s a sweet spot for investment for hotels, suggesting an investment of €250-€700k a break-even of 12-18 months and an area of 350sq m.

He also gave examples of a four-star hotel in the South of France with 80 rooms and a 400sq m spa. This property made an investment of €380k in longevity and introduced a successful four-day programme for metabolic health at a rate of €1,650 per person.

“Longevity is an opportunity for the sector,” said Boudon. “But tread carefully and make sure you make the right investments, as there are new modalities coming to market all the time and without planning, your scheme could quickly be obsolete.”

The event wrapped up with a panel discussion led by FIBO’s Emily Whigham, with Andrew Gibson, Marion Gérent – general manager at La Fondation Hotel (the venue for the event) and Dr Katharina Sepp, medical doctor at Alpinresort Sacher, which has a very high-level wellness offering called The Academy for Better Ageing.

Gibson said people who use spas in hotels spend more on F&B, stay longer and are more profitable than those who don’t, with this insight being valuable for operators seeking funding or who need to make a case for viability.

The panel agreed that most people’s priority is healthspan and living a life where they can do what they choose without limitations.

“We try not to be a hospital,” said Sepp. “Too many medical examinations can make you feel as though you're sick when you’re not. We want to give people the opportunity to do positive things for their health.

“We start with a physical examination – these days doctors rarely touch you or customise treatments. We do things differently - we personalise programmes by looking at family history and we do a physical examination so we really understand the individual.”

Alpinresort Sacher offers DNA testing so they can advise on optimum exercise and wellness routines and then evidence the impact of these wellness interventions.

“We offer all our staff the option to use the spa and longevity facilities, such as the cryotherapy," said Sepp. "That way, they can talk to the members about it.”

Sepp said Alpinresort ensures medical interventions are billed separately, so customers can charge this proportion of their stay to their insurance company.

Gérent said Interventions at La Fondation are designed to suit each person and to deliver long-term change. The hotel has already signed up 1,500 local members since it opened three months ago.

“We offer a lot of activities on site and create a lot of programmes with activities with nutrition and support from coaches and therapists giving spa treatments,” she said.

“We’re already running three aqua aerobics classes a day, due to demand,” said Gérent, although bookings in the spa treatment rooms and the climbing wall are not yet at capacity.

Gibson advised a hybrid model for operators that don’t have the capacity to invest heavily in longevity – ”Start with retreats,” said Gibson. “Run them regularly and then build from there”.

He suggested that when organising visiting practitioners for retreats, to ensure they are contracted to deliver a proportion of their classes to the in-house staff teams, advising operators to make employee wellness a cornerstone of any longevity initiative. “If the employees are happy, the guest will see that and it rubs off, so let’s start there,” he said.

FIBO 
FIBO and its parent company RX have convened a high-level seminar recently called Longevity in Hospitality.
SAB,HHR,HOT,RST,EVT
2025/THUMB-20251223175154-125.jpg

Latest news

Independent operator, Fitness Worx Gyms, is introducing private blood testing as a service to members.
International industry lobbying associations are calling for physical activity and strength training to be deeply
Global group exercise specialist, Les Mills, is inviting operators to sign up to its Workout
Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider, HUM2N, to launch
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, is gearing up to unveil its most significant redevelopment
Researchers in the US have identified an antibody which could greatly reduce the loss of
Elevate Arena
Elevate Arena
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal
Peloton has made the strategic acquisition of Pilates start-up, Skōp, to support the expansion of
Crunch Fitness has announced the launch of Crunch Reform Pilates – its own reformer concept
The 20th State of the Industry Report from LeisureDB has revealed a resilient, expanding and
Purpose Brands has announced its entry into the Italian market, having sold the franchise rights
Fitness First UK is integrating red light therapy into its yoga and Pilates classes through
Nuffield Health has told HCM that it takes its responsibilities towards its colleagues seriously and
Alliance Leisure
Alliance Leisure
Elevate is set to celebrate its 10th anniversary in style this June, with organisers confirming
Technogym has announced the launch of the Run X World Treadmill Championship, the first world
Shocked by the UK loneliness statistics, charitable trust Mytime Active has been doubling down on
Portugal’s leading operator, SC Fitness, is celebrating a milestone by reaching 100 gyms.  The company
Australia’s fast-growing fitness network, Viva Leisure, is adding a low-cost gym brand to its already
Speedflex has launched a strength training programme for 10 to 16-year-olds, to make it safer,
Tewinbury Farm Hotel in Hertfordshire, UK is expanding its premium leisure proposition with the launch
Global Wellness Summit
Global Wellness Summit
One of the biggest mistakes operators in the fitness industry still make is advertising almost

Work is underway in Madrid on one of Europe’s most significant multi-functional complexes,

PureGym is encouraging people to step away from their screens and go for a walk,
Xplor Fitness & Leisure
Xplor Fitness & Leisure
1 - 20 of 12,300
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
SnowDome Fitness has added 50 per cent more space with cutting-edge Technogym solutions
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
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
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
Starpool supports Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs, says Riccardo Turri
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
Active IQ is calling for greater accountability in online fitness advice with the launch of a new trustmark
HCM promotional features
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
I experienced a blissful feeling of joy I hadn’t felt since I was a kid
HCM magazine
Small improvements to sleep, diet and physical activity have major benefits for the heart, according to new research from the University of Sydney
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 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
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
Strength training is evolving, driven by changing consumer preferences. Julie Cramer talks to innovators about how their products are meeting this demand
HCM magazine
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
HCM magazine
Julie Cramer highlights recent health club flooring upgrades, as top suppliers give their advice
HCM magazine
HCM People

Deena Gillan

Chair of UK Active’s Independent Council and GM at 3-1-5
There are so many dedicated people in the independent sector – they work hard because they’re passionate about changing lives
HCM magazine
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: Reaching the people most gyms miss: Bedford Gym & Swim Campaign delivers 410 new members
One of the biggest mistakes the fitness industry still makes is advertising almost exclusively to people who already look and live like gym members.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds.
Company profiles
Company profile: IndigoFitness
IndigoFitness creates bespoke training spaces for commercial, education, public-sector, and specialist clients including the MoD ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Brass Monkey
Brass Monkey designs and builds the world’s finest commercial-grade ice baths, working with leading gyms ...
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
Alliance Leisure Services (Design, Build and Fund) press release: Trowbridge pupils create lasting legacy at time capsule event
Pupils from schools across Trowbridge have come together to bury a time capsule at the site of the town’s new leisure centre, capturing a snapshot of life in 2026 for future generations.
Featured press releases
BLK BOX press release: Inside the build: Aberdeen Sports Village
When Aberdeen Sports Village set out to upgrade its gym offering, the goal was to create a more motivating, versatile and high-performing training environment for its diverse member base.
Directory
Fitness tracking platform
SpiviTech: Fitness tracking platform
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
Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Aquaform s.r.l.: Water experiences and hydrotherapy solutions
Hot tubs
MSpa International Ltd: Hot tubs
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:
Elevate Arena
Elevate Arena
Partner sites