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features

Interview: Brian Morris

Aspria has built a collection of high-end, wellness-focused members’ clubs. Now its founder and CEO is launching a new brand – Aspresso. He talks to Kate Cracknell

Published in Health Club Management 2023 issue 4

Sum up the last few years
I’d rather look forward than dwell on what’s been a painful period for everyone. Suffice to say we’re grateful to have some of the most loyal members around, many of whom continued to pay through government-enforced club closures. Financially we’re back to pre-COVID levels and member numbers are close; the recovery has been as good as we could have hoped.

We haven’t only been focusing on recovery, but also on growth. In 2021, we secured a €50m initial financing tranche from Fortress Investment Group in the US (www.fortress.com) – proof health and wellbeing are on the radar of the biggest financial institutions in the world.

In spite of moving from pandemic into war, with all the horrors and cost of living crises that has brought, the interest in all things health remains strong. There’s been a sea change in mentality and approach, whereby health is now a key element of a modern way of living and working.

So the pandemic changed people’s priorities?
Certainly for me, the lessons have been that life is shorter than you think and you need to embrace it. Rather than planning for a long time in the future – working for 40 years, then retiring – people’s perspectives are now more immediate. As far as it’s possible to achieve, we’re looking for a combination life: working to earn, yes, but also prioritising looking after ourselves through leisure time, me time and family time.

But how to achieve this when we don’t have any more time in the day? The answer is by being more efficient with time and this is where Aspria comes in, because when you’re in a large health and wellness club such as ours, with so many different opportunities on offer – an answer to so many of your wellness needs in one place – you minimise time wasted on travel.

And so our clubs are becoming real third places after work and home, as the definition and edges of those previous silos blur to create a new work-life balance in a more fluid society. We’re seeing a melding of different elements within our working and leisure week and that’s exciting. We’re all having to learn what that change means for us, not only as individuals and families, but also as operators and developers.

What are Aspria’s big projects at the moment?
Our clubs are large and complex, averaging 100,000sq ft, so you can’t simply find locations to order. You have to be patient. Aspria Roosevelt, for example – the club we’re currently building in Brussels – is a project I’ve been working on for 22 years.

Once a chateau and family home of the Solvays, then a sports facility for Solvay company employees, we eventually agreed to go into partnership with the Solvay organisation, to run it as a club for its employees and external members. That was before the company moved its head office out of Brussels city centre and we acquired the property and its 10 acres of grounds for Aspria. We’ve since been working on a very complex development permitting process: it took seven years but we’re now starting construction.

Opening in 2024, Aspria Roosevelt will be a 140,000sq ft club with our normal mix of beautiful facilities: outdoor tennis courts, indoor courts under bubbles, indoor and outdoor pools, extensive fitness facilities, a full spa and large family area. All the bells and whistles you’d expect from us.

Meanwhile, we’re investing heavily in our existing Aspria clubs in Italy, Germany and Belgium, including a spa and pool remodelling at Avenue Louise, a huge new €1m spa at Royal La Rasante and extensive remodelling of Arts-Loi to make the club very group exercise-focused, with fully immersive studios.

Beyond that, as we’ve done for almost 30 years, we’ll continue to look for new opportunities. I envisage further representation for Aspria within our existing territories where the brand is already recognised and where – in larger cities – we believe the market potential exists. We also feel there are more countries and more markets to come for Aspria.

I look at the pandemic as simply having delayed our growth and evolution as a company. Of course, interruptions of the scale we’ve seen over recent years could have knocked us completely off track, but there’s been real tenacity among the Aspria leadership team – resolve to make sure something good came out of that appalling period in all our lives.

Tell us about your new brand
Opportunities are funny things: you don’t see any for a while, then they all come along at once. We’ve developed eight Aspria clubs in 20 years. With our new Aspresso brand, we’ll deliver four clubs in 18 months.

By budget club standards that isn’t a huge number, but Aspresso isn’t just a gym. Each club will have large outdoor activity spaces – mostly racquets but also other sports, especially where there’s a legacy – as well as swimming, fitness and group exercise, food and beverage and kids’ facilities. So these are big, family-friendly clubs.

The difference compared to Aspria is the market positioning: Aspresso is the sports and fitness club for the wider market, with a lower price tag – €50–€60 a month – and sufficient activity space for a bigger membership.

It’s a fresh, light, contemporary, welcoming brand. A bit less flair and a bit more function than Aspria – more ‘IKEA’, more modular, but somewhere you’ll feel comfortable and have all the facilities you want. It’s less about how beautiful and high-end the facilities are, more about the fact that you can access them all for an affordable price.

I’d place Aspresso in the relatively unpopulated ‘budget family’ segment. In fact, Go Fit – Gabriel Sáez and his team – is arguably the only other operator doing anything like this at the moment and I have huge respect for them. They’re excellent operators, very of-the-moment, with a well thought-through product developed in collaboration with universities, the medical sector and so on. The way they dealt with COVID… it was so professional, so intelligent, so impressive.

At Aspria we had medical experts, 360° Aspria Pro health assessments, immunity-based programmes in place for seven years before the pandemic. But Go Fit did it at pace and with volume. That’s what was so impressive.

Of course, we’re not here to copy Go Fit: we have our own Aspria Group DNA and we’ll shape our affordable ‘club for everyone’ concept accordingly. Our model is also mainly one of private funding, while Go Fit works primarily in partnership with local authorities. Different routes to the same goal.

Tell us about your first Aspresso site
First to launch is Aspresso K7 Valencia; I’ve loved Spain for 25 years and we’ve been looking for the right opportunities there for a long time.

What we’ve acquired is a large family club, most recently known as Club de Campo K7 Valencia, with over 30 years of history and set in nine acres of land. What we’ve inherited is a club that over the years has been developed in a rather unplanned, piecemeal way.

We now want to create a cohesive, planned, symbiotic development of facilities that are fit for purpose, both for modern families and for adult members. This will inevitably require us to phase the development, as the club will remain open throughout.

The club relaunched as Aspresso K7 Valencia at the beginning of April. We’ve done a lot of work on the infrastructure, people and systems already, but our investment in the facilities will be ongoing for the next 12–18 months and indeed beyond.

I love what I call ‘ugly ducklings’: the clubs you need to encourage to come out and blossom. K7 definitely needs some love and we’ll be spending millions, but the end result will be fantastic. There’s also a beauty in a complex project like this where there’s always more to come.

What are your rollout plans?
The next site is in Rome – another existing but closed-down club we’ve acquired. The re-opening and rebrand to Aspresso will be announced soon and we’ll open in Q4.

Clubs three and four will be in Germany and Italy, opening between Q4 2023 and Q2 2024.

Beyond that, we believe a few clubs a year is a sustainable development programme for us. We’ll be looking for further opportunities in Spain, Germany and Italy as well as elsewhere in Europe.

Negotiations are also ongoing for new-build clubs, but for now we’re predominantly focused on acquiring, rebranding and remodelling existing clubs as we find it’s a faster way to grow. It does make things more complex, of course, because you have to be mindful of the history and the legacy. But as we’ve shown at Aspria, where many of our clubs had a life before we took the reins – Royal La Rasante first opened in 1902, just as one example – it’s possible to intelligently integrate that legacy and history within an entirely new concept.

And that’s what our team is really good at: interpreting what’s right for now and for the future, then making sure that’s what we deliver. So this is what we’re doing at Aspresso K7 Valencia: leveraging its past, but with a contemporary outlook and much-upgraded facilities to suit the modern family and a modern lifestyle.

What excites you about Aspresso?
Other than the darkest days of COVID, I don’t think I’ve ever had a day where I haven’t been excited about the future of the group, whether that’s developing Aspria clubs or Aspresso clubs or some of our other initiatives and ideas. That’s my driving force, and the driving force of the senior team I’m so proud of.

And then Aspresso specifically… I’ve wanted to do it for some time. My family wasn’t wealthy and money was tight. This is my way of making sure the Aspria Group appeals to a larger proportion of the population.

This isn’t some great altruistic campaign. I just think that change can come through the carrot or the stick, and I favour the carrot. For me, that means creating clubs for everyone, making improved health and wellness available to more people. If we’re in a position to give back in that way, why wouldn’t we?

And the whole senior team, some of whom have been with me for two decades, are really excited about it. It’s great to see them so energised, so firm in their belief that we’re heading in the right direction.

The speed of the roll-out is a complete step change for us: it feels as though we’re coming out of the pandemic and have lit the afterburners! But after the last few years of getting through on sheer willpower and tenacity, it’s nice to finally be exhausted for happy reasons.

Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
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features

Interview: Brian Morris

Aspria has built a collection of high-end, wellness-focused members’ clubs. Now its founder and CEO is launching a new brand – Aspresso. He talks to Kate Cracknell

Published in Health Club Management 2023 issue 4

Sum up the last few years
I’d rather look forward than dwell on what’s been a painful period for everyone. Suffice to say we’re grateful to have some of the most loyal members around, many of whom continued to pay through government-enforced club closures. Financially we’re back to pre-COVID levels and member numbers are close; the recovery has been as good as we could have hoped.

We haven’t only been focusing on recovery, but also on growth. In 2021, we secured a €50m initial financing tranche from Fortress Investment Group in the US (www.fortress.com) – proof health and wellbeing are on the radar of the biggest financial institutions in the world.

In spite of moving from pandemic into war, with all the horrors and cost of living crises that has brought, the interest in all things health remains strong. There’s been a sea change in mentality and approach, whereby health is now a key element of a modern way of living and working.

So the pandemic changed people’s priorities?
Certainly for me, the lessons have been that life is shorter than you think and you need to embrace it. Rather than planning for a long time in the future – working for 40 years, then retiring – people’s perspectives are now more immediate. As far as it’s possible to achieve, we’re looking for a combination life: working to earn, yes, but also prioritising looking after ourselves through leisure time, me time and family time.

But how to achieve this when we don’t have any more time in the day? The answer is by being more efficient with time and this is where Aspria comes in, because when you’re in a large health and wellness club such as ours, with so many different opportunities on offer – an answer to so many of your wellness needs in one place – you minimise time wasted on travel.

And so our clubs are becoming real third places after work and home, as the definition and edges of those previous silos blur to create a new work-life balance in a more fluid society. We’re seeing a melding of different elements within our working and leisure week and that’s exciting. We’re all having to learn what that change means for us, not only as individuals and families, but also as operators and developers.

What are Aspria’s big projects at the moment?
Our clubs are large and complex, averaging 100,000sq ft, so you can’t simply find locations to order. You have to be patient. Aspria Roosevelt, for example – the club we’re currently building in Brussels – is a project I’ve been working on for 22 years.

Once a chateau and family home of the Solvays, then a sports facility for Solvay company employees, we eventually agreed to go into partnership with the Solvay organisation, to run it as a club for its employees and external members. That was before the company moved its head office out of Brussels city centre and we acquired the property and its 10 acres of grounds for Aspria. We’ve since been working on a very complex development permitting process: it took seven years but we’re now starting construction.

Opening in 2024, Aspria Roosevelt will be a 140,000sq ft club with our normal mix of beautiful facilities: outdoor tennis courts, indoor courts under bubbles, indoor and outdoor pools, extensive fitness facilities, a full spa and large family area. All the bells and whistles you’d expect from us.

Meanwhile, we’re investing heavily in our existing Aspria clubs in Italy, Germany and Belgium, including a spa and pool remodelling at Avenue Louise, a huge new €1m spa at Royal La Rasante and extensive remodelling of Arts-Loi to make the club very group exercise-focused, with fully immersive studios.

Beyond that, as we’ve done for almost 30 years, we’ll continue to look for new opportunities. I envisage further representation for Aspria within our existing territories where the brand is already recognised and where – in larger cities – we believe the market potential exists. We also feel there are more countries and more markets to come for Aspria.

I look at the pandemic as simply having delayed our growth and evolution as a company. Of course, interruptions of the scale we’ve seen over recent years could have knocked us completely off track, but there’s been real tenacity among the Aspria leadership team – resolve to make sure something good came out of that appalling period in all our lives.

Tell us about your new brand
Opportunities are funny things: you don’t see any for a while, then they all come along at once. We’ve developed eight Aspria clubs in 20 years. With our new Aspresso brand, we’ll deliver four clubs in 18 months.

By budget club standards that isn’t a huge number, but Aspresso isn’t just a gym. Each club will have large outdoor activity spaces – mostly racquets but also other sports, especially where there’s a legacy – as well as swimming, fitness and group exercise, food and beverage and kids’ facilities. So these are big, family-friendly clubs.

The difference compared to Aspria is the market positioning: Aspresso is the sports and fitness club for the wider market, with a lower price tag – €50–€60 a month – and sufficient activity space for a bigger membership.

It’s a fresh, light, contemporary, welcoming brand. A bit less flair and a bit more function than Aspria – more ‘IKEA’, more modular, but somewhere you’ll feel comfortable and have all the facilities you want. It’s less about how beautiful and high-end the facilities are, more about the fact that you can access them all for an affordable price.

I’d place Aspresso in the relatively unpopulated ‘budget family’ segment. In fact, Go Fit – Gabriel Sáez and his team – is arguably the only other operator doing anything like this at the moment and I have huge respect for them. They’re excellent operators, very of-the-moment, with a well thought-through product developed in collaboration with universities, the medical sector and so on. The way they dealt with COVID… it was so professional, so intelligent, so impressive.

At Aspria we had medical experts, 360° Aspria Pro health assessments, immunity-based programmes in place for seven years before the pandemic. But Go Fit did it at pace and with volume. That’s what was so impressive.

Of course, we’re not here to copy Go Fit: we have our own Aspria Group DNA and we’ll shape our affordable ‘club for everyone’ concept accordingly. Our model is also mainly one of private funding, while Go Fit works primarily in partnership with local authorities. Different routes to the same goal.

Tell us about your first Aspresso site
First to launch is Aspresso K7 Valencia; I’ve loved Spain for 25 years and we’ve been looking for the right opportunities there for a long time.

What we’ve acquired is a large family club, most recently known as Club de Campo K7 Valencia, with over 30 years of history and set in nine acres of land. What we’ve inherited is a club that over the years has been developed in a rather unplanned, piecemeal way.

We now want to create a cohesive, planned, symbiotic development of facilities that are fit for purpose, both for modern families and for adult members. This will inevitably require us to phase the development, as the club will remain open throughout.

The club relaunched as Aspresso K7 Valencia at the beginning of April. We’ve done a lot of work on the infrastructure, people and systems already, but our investment in the facilities will be ongoing for the next 12–18 months and indeed beyond.

I love what I call ‘ugly ducklings’: the clubs you need to encourage to come out and blossom. K7 definitely needs some love and we’ll be spending millions, but the end result will be fantastic. There’s also a beauty in a complex project like this where there’s always more to come.

What are your rollout plans?
The next site is in Rome – another existing but closed-down club we’ve acquired. The re-opening and rebrand to Aspresso will be announced soon and we’ll open in Q4.

Clubs three and four will be in Germany and Italy, opening between Q4 2023 and Q2 2024.

Beyond that, we believe a few clubs a year is a sustainable development programme for us. We’ll be looking for further opportunities in Spain, Germany and Italy as well as elsewhere in Europe.

Negotiations are also ongoing for new-build clubs, but for now we’re predominantly focused on acquiring, rebranding and remodelling existing clubs as we find it’s a faster way to grow. It does make things more complex, of course, because you have to be mindful of the history and the legacy. But as we’ve shown at Aspria, where many of our clubs had a life before we took the reins – Royal La Rasante first opened in 1902, just as one example – it’s possible to intelligently integrate that legacy and history within an entirely new concept.

And that’s what our team is really good at: interpreting what’s right for now and for the future, then making sure that’s what we deliver. So this is what we’re doing at Aspresso K7 Valencia: leveraging its past, but with a contemporary outlook and much-upgraded facilities to suit the modern family and a modern lifestyle.

What excites you about Aspresso?
Other than the darkest days of COVID, I don’t think I’ve ever had a day where I haven’t been excited about the future of the group, whether that’s developing Aspria clubs or Aspresso clubs or some of our other initiatives and ideas. That’s my driving force, and the driving force of the senior team I’m so proud of.

And then Aspresso specifically… I’ve wanted to do it for some time. My family wasn’t wealthy and money was tight. This is my way of making sure the Aspria Group appeals to a larger proportion of the population.

This isn’t some great altruistic campaign. I just think that change can come through the carrot or the stick, and I favour the carrot. For me, that means creating clubs for everyone, making improved health and wellness available to more people. If we’re in a position to give back in that way, why wouldn’t we?

And the whole senior team, some of whom have been with me for two decades, are really excited about it. It’s great to see them so energised, so firm in their belief that we’re heading in the right direction.

The speed of the roll-out is a complete step change for us: it feels as though we’re coming out of the pandemic and have lit the afterburners! But after the last few years of getting through on sheer willpower and tenacity, it’s nice to finally be exhausted for happy reasons.

Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
Gallery
More features
Editor's letter

Into the fitaverse

Fitness is already among the top three markets in the metaverse, with new technology and partnerships driving real growth and consumer engagement that looks likely to spill over into health clubs, gyms and studios
Fit Tech people

Ali Jawad

Paralympic powerlifter and founder, Accessercise
Users can easily identify which facilities in the UK are accessible to the disabled community
Fit Tech people

Hannes Sjöblad

MD, DSruptive
We want to give our users an implantable tool that allows them to collect their health data at any time and in any setting
Fit Tech people

Jamie Buck

Co-founder, Active in Time
We created a solution called AiT Voice, which turns digital data into a spoken audio timetable that connects to phone systems
Profile

Fahad Alhagbani: reinventing fitness

The team is young and ambitious, and the awareness of technology is very high. We share trends and out-of-the-box ideas almost every day
Opinion

Building on the blockchain

For small sports teams looking to compete with giants, blockchain can be a secret weapon explains Lars Rensing, CEO of Protokol
Innovation

Bold move

Our results showed a greater than 60 per cent reduction in falls for individuals who actively participated in Bold’s programme
App analysis

Check your form

Sency’s motion analysis technology is allowing users to check their technique as they exercise. Co-founder and CEO Gal Rotman explains how
Profile

New reality

Sam Cole, CEO of FitXR, talks to Fit Tech about taking digital workouts to the next level, with an immersive, virtual reality fitness club
Profile

Sohail Rashid

The app is free and it’s $40 to participate in one of our virtual events
Ageing

Reverse Ageing

Many apps help people track their health, but Humanity founders Peter Ward and Michael Geer have put the focus on ageing, to help users to see the direct repercussions of their habits. They talk to Steph Eaves
App analysis

Going hybrid

Workout Anytime created its app in partnership with Virtuagym. Workout Anytime’s Greg Maurer and Virtuagym’s Hugo Braam explain the process behind its creation
Research

Physical activity monitors boost activity levels

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have conducted a meta analysis of all relevant research and found that the body of evidence shows an impact
Editor's letter

Two-way coaching

Content providers have been hugely active in the fit tech market since the start of the pandemic. We expect the industry to move on from delivering these services on a ‘broadcast-only’ basis as two-way coaching becomes the new USP
Fit Tech People

Laurent Petit

Co-founder, Active Giving
The future of sports and fitness are dependent on the climate. Our goal is to positively influence the future of our planet by instilling a global vision of wellbeing and a sense of collective action
Fit Tech People

Adam Zeitsiff

CEO, Intelivideo
We don’t just create the technology and bail – we support our clients’ ongoing hybridisation efforts
Fit Tech People

Anantharaman Pattabiraman

CEO and co-founder, Auro
When you’re undertaking fitness activities, unless you’re on a stationary bike, in most cases it’s not safe or necessary to be tied to a screen, especially a small screen
Fit Tech People

Mike Hansen

Managing partner, Endorphinz
We noticed a big gap in the market – customers needed better insights but also recommendations on what to do, whether that be customer acquisition, content creation, marketing and more
More features