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Les Mills unveils new studios and "future-focused" training styles at Auckland City Gym
POSTED 18 Jun 2019 . BY Tom Walker

We want people to get excited about being in these spaces, so we’ve designed them as a sensory experience and put an intimate focus on design
– Les Mills Jnr
Fitness giant Les Mills has launched three new studio spaces at its iconic Auckland City Gym in New Zealand.

Two of the new spaces have been created to trial and support the launch of new exercise programmes, which Les Mills has designed in-house.

The fresh additions include a "highly tactile" functional studio – which will host a newly-developed training workout called Ceremony – and a design-led boxing studio created around the needs of a new boxing conditioning workout called Conquer.

The third new space is an immersive indoor cycling studio – which Les Mills says is the largest of its kind in the world – featuring a 100-bike terraced theatre environment. It is accompanied by a wall-to-wall curved screen and a five-projector, cinema-quality audio-visual system that delivers Les Mills’ ground-breaking The Trip.

Ceremony is a 45-minute functional training workout with a focus on a whole-body exercise mixing strength, cardio and conditioning within a shared community experience.

“Ceremony is our take on functional training," said Les Mills product innovation team member, Ezra Fantl.

"We use all sorts of equipment; SkiErgs, rowers, agility ladders, sleds, kettlebells – but we aren’t stuck in a mindset that doesn’t let us innovate. We also incorporate explosive exercises, balance and coordination drills, and whole-body flow-based movements like bear crawls.

The other new exercise product, Conquer, is a 45-minute boxing conditioning workout that uses a trio of treadmill running, aquabag punching and resistance-based cardio exercises – such as ball slams and skipping. The workout is structured like a boxing match: three minutes of work, with one minute to recover and transition to your next station.

“We’ve designed the space so that the atmosphere is intimate as you walk into the room, the lights are low and the workout is completely your own,” said Les Mills product innovation team member Adam Lazarus.

“You can be a professional boxer, or never have thrown a punch, and you will get a great workout.”

The new spaces were designed by New Zealand architects Monk Mackenzie and interior designer Rufus Knight, working in partnership with design studio Alt Group.

According to Les Mills Jnr, who led the development of the new studios and workouts, a key objective was to partner with New Zealand’s best designers to create spaces that work at both a practical and aesthetic level.

“We’ve put an intimate focus on design to create the most incredible end-to-end experience for members,” Mills Jnr said.

“We want people to get excited about being in this space, so we’ve designed it as a sensory experience. It looks good, it smells good, and it’s a place they feel they belong in. We want it to be a cultural hub for our members.”

Mills Jnr added that Ceremony and Conquer will now be trialled at the Auckland site, but didn't reveal any details of a possible rollout as yet.

“At the Les Mills Auckland City Gym we’re passionate about designing the best experience we can,” he said.

“The facilities are stepping into a premium space, with more focus on spatial design. We are really trying to provide a great fitness experience – one that represents the essence of Les Mills and what it stands for.”

As well as acting as the "laboratory" space for the new training styles, the new workout spaces are the first stage of a long-term project to transform the home of Les Mills in Auckland – which in its long history has been an industrial building, a nightclub and a boxing gym.

Rather than completely renovate the original space, architects Monk Mackenzie have designed an interior box, essentially creating a boutique gym inside a gym.

The new studios are a response to changing demographics and exercise trends, as well as an aesthetic makeover of a tired area of the gym.

The design of the space has been led with the expectations of the Gen Z and Millennial demographics in mind – due to the two generations currently driving much of the global fitness spend.

The box-like structure containing the Immersive Cycle studio is designed like a mini-building, with its own roof and its own acoustics.

“Rather than being about gyms, it was about creating something experiential,” said Monk Mackenzie partner Dean McKenzie.

“We wanted to make the whole experience feel kind of theatrical, in terms of when you walk in, the spaces we’ve created and the sub-spaces. The Immersive Cycle studio is theatre-like; when you are in the functional studio and the boxing studio, the lighting is calibrated to be moody. The spaces feel intimate.

“It’s an inclusive space, not trying to be masculine like many gym spaces. The brief from Les Mills was very clear about that, moving it away from being an intimidating space. The ‘materiality’ plays into that, making it feel less ‘sweaty and grunty’.”

• To read a recent interview with Les Mills CEO Clive Ormerod, click here for the April 2019 issue of HCM.
The additions include a studio with 100 indoor bikes, set out in a terraced theatre environment
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  FEATURE: Industry insights: Body language


At the University of Leeds, Les Mills™ Virtual group exercise classes are key to combining exercise and wellbeing with language learning for international students
  FEATURE: People profile: Clive Ormerod


The incoming CEO of Les Mills International explains his vision for the organisation as it enters a new period of expansion
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NEWS
Les Mills unveils new studios and "future-focused" training styles at Auckland City Gym
POSTED 18 Jun 2019 . BY Tom Walker
We want people to get excited about being in these spaces, so we’ve designed them as a sensory experience and put an intimate focus on design
– Les Mills Jnr
Fitness giant Les Mills has launched three new studio spaces at its iconic Auckland City Gym in New Zealand.

Two of the new spaces have been created to trial and support the launch of new exercise programmes, which Les Mills has designed in-house.

The fresh additions include a "highly tactile" functional studio – which will host a newly-developed training workout called Ceremony – and a design-led boxing studio created around the needs of a new boxing conditioning workout called Conquer.

The third new space is an immersive indoor cycling studio – which Les Mills says is the largest of its kind in the world – featuring a 100-bike terraced theatre environment. It is accompanied by a wall-to-wall curved screen and a five-projector, cinema-quality audio-visual system that delivers Les Mills’ ground-breaking The Trip.

Ceremony is a 45-minute functional training workout with a focus on a whole-body exercise mixing strength, cardio and conditioning within a shared community experience.

“Ceremony is our take on functional training," said Les Mills product innovation team member, Ezra Fantl.

"We use all sorts of equipment; SkiErgs, rowers, agility ladders, sleds, kettlebells – but we aren’t stuck in a mindset that doesn’t let us innovate. We also incorporate explosive exercises, balance and coordination drills, and whole-body flow-based movements like bear crawls.

The other new exercise product, Conquer, is a 45-minute boxing conditioning workout that uses a trio of treadmill running, aquabag punching and resistance-based cardio exercises – such as ball slams and skipping. The workout is structured like a boxing match: three minutes of work, with one minute to recover and transition to your next station.

“We’ve designed the space so that the atmosphere is intimate as you walk into the room, the lights are low and the workout is completely your own,” said Les Mills product innovation team member Adam Lazarus.

“You can be a professional boxer, or never have thrown a punch, and you will get a great workout.”

The new spaces were designed by New Zealand architects Monk Mackenzie and interior designer Rufus Knight, working in partnership with design studio Alt Group.

According to Les Mills Jnr, who led the development of the new studios and workouts, a key objective was to partner with New Zealand’s best designers to create spaces that work at both a practical and aesthetic level.

“We’ve put an intimate focus on design to create the most incredible end-to-end experience for members,” Mills Jnr said.

“We want people to get excited about being in this space, so we’ve designed it as a sensory experience. It looks good, it smells good, and it’s a place they feel they belong in. We want it to be a cultural hub for our members.”

Mills Jnr added that Ceremony and Conquer will now be trialled at the Auckland site, but didn't reveal any details of a possible rollout as yet.

“At the Les Mills Auckland City Gym we’re passionate about designing the best experience we can,” he said.

“The facilities are stepping into a premium space, with more focus on spatial design. We are really trying to provide a great fitness experience – one that represents the essence of Les Mills and what it stands for.”

As well as acting as the "laboratory" space for the new training styles, the new workout spaces are the first stage of a long-term project to transform the home of Les Mills in Auckland – which in its long history has been an industrial building, a nightclub and a boxing gym.

Rather than completely renovate the original space, architects Monk Mackenzie have designed an interior box, essentially creating a boutique gym inside a gym.

The new studios are a response to changing demographics and exercise trends, as well as an aesthetic makeover of a tired area of the gym.

The design of the space has been led with the expectations of the Gen Z and Millennial demographics in mind – due to the two generations currently driving much of the global fitness spend.

The box-like structure containing the Immersive Cycle studio is designed like a mini-building, with its own roof and its own acoustics.

“Rather than being about gyms, it was about creating something experiential,” said Monk Mackenzie partner Dean McKenzie.

“We wanted to make the whole experience feel kind of theatrical, in terms of when you walk in, the spaces we’ve created and the sub-spaces. The Immersive Cycle studio is theatre-like; when you are in the functional studio and the boxing studio, the lighting is calibrated to be moody. The spaces feel intimate.

“It’s an inclusive space, not trying to be masculine like many gym spaces. The brief from Les Mills was very clear about that, moving it away from being an intimidating space. The ‘materiality’ plays into that, making it feel less ‘sweaty and grunty’.”

• To read a recent interview with Les Mills CEO Clive Ormerod, click here for the April 2019 issue of HCM.
The additions include a studio with 100 indoor bikes, set out in a terraced theatre environment
RELATED STORIES
Les Mills makes its early years programming available on single license to fight childhood inactivity


Les Mills has made its Born to Move programming – which targets children as young as two – available in box set mode.
FEATURE: Industry insights: Body language


At the University of Leeds, Les Mills™ Virtual group exercise classes are key to combining exercise and wellbeing with language learning for international students
FEATURE: People profile: Clive Ormerod


The incoming CEO of Les Mills International explains his vision for the organisation as it enters a new period of expansion
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A US$50 million (£44.2 million, €51.2 million) transformation of Chicago's historic McCormick Mansion has created a new destination that combines live magic, immersive theatre, dining and private membership under one roof.
Montana Heritage Center opens with immersive exhibits and US$107 million investment
The Montana Historical Society has officially celebrated the opening of its new Montana Heritage Center, a US$107 million (£79 million, €92 million) destination that combines immersive storytelling with cutting-edge audiovisual technology to bring the sta
Universal launches new theme park model with Kids Resort
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