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features

New opening: Bastille bijou

Kate Cracknell pays a visit to Club Med Gym’s latest new opening – the high-end Pure Club Med Gym, located on Paris’ Place de la Bastille

Published in Health Club Management 2013 issue 2

“Budget clubs have not killed the market. There’s still plenty of space for mid-market and luxury operators,” states Franck Gueguen, CEO of health club operator Club Med Gym, which operates 22 sites across Paris, as well as 23 clubs in Switzerland under the Silhouette brand. Twenty-one of the Club Med Gym sites are mid-market, although five – operating under the Waou Club Med Gym brand – are premium mid-market.

In spite of this current bias towards the mid-market, Gueguen is very clear in his opinions. “The future of the sector is high-end,” he says. And the success of Pure Club Med Gym – the company’s first venture into high-end facilities, which opened in June 2012 – certainly suggests there’s some truth in this statement.

Creating ‘bien-être’
Gueguen had, he explains, wanted to launch a high-end gym concept for some time, but realised location was the key. “Club Med Gym has been around for 34 years and we already had 21 clubs across Paris, with a 22nd in the pipeline that will open in April 2013. That made it particularly hard to find the right location for a Pure Club Med Gym.

“Then an opportunity arose in the Opéra Bastille – our new club is located within the Opéra building, in a basement space formerly occupied by a book/music store. As the Opéra belongs to the State, we had to go through a public bid process. It took two and a half years to secure the site, which we now rent from the Opéra. But we were confident it was the location we needed to launch our new concept.”

He continues: “In Paris, there are very few luxury clubs, and in the 12th arrondissement – Bastille – the demographics are high-end. It’s a very fashionable residential area experiencing a lot of growth. We knew the demand was there for a truly premium club.”

Indeed, in the first six months, the club – which has set a cap on member numbers, limiting it to 2,000 to maintain a sense of exclusivity – had already signed up 1,245 members, split roughly 50:50 men to women, paying i150 a month. Interestingly, 67 per cent of these had never been gym members before. “You have to remember that, in France, total market penetration is only 5.4 per cent,” says Gueguen. “Nevertheless, with Pure Club Med Gym, we’ve created a model that’s very specifically bringing new people into health and fitness. We’ve created a space where people feel good – a club to which they want to belong, where they feel comfortable and want to spend time.”

That sense of feeling good – of ‘bien-être’, as they say in France – lies at the heart of the Pure Club Med Gym concept, as Gueguen explains: “It’s about making our members feel at home, not necessarily in the décor or the feel of the club, which has been designed with a private members’ club in mind, but in the attention to detail.

“When members come into the club, every single one is greeted by a member of staff who comes out to welcome them in. We have a partnership with Babyliss, so we can lend members anything they might need – hairdryer, straighteners and so on. We have iPads in our lounge area, as well as newspapers and magazines and bowls of fruit, so people can relax with a coffee after their workout. We’ve already found that Pure Club Med Gym members spend, on average, 25 minutes more at the club than members spend at our other sites.

“So yes, we focus heavily on service – that’s a key USP for us. We offer dry cleaning, free towels, discounts on parking. There’s a member of staff on the gym floor at all times, and they really do talk to members. When it’s time for a class, rather than people having to queue, the instructor will go and find them, and we limit classes to a maximum of 30 people. Similarly, we offer a 15-minute, small group abs/stretch class every hour, and again the instructor will go around the gym encouraging people to take part – people don’t stretch properly otherwise, and it’s very important.

“For us, high-end is determined less by the facilities and more by training staff how to properly treat members. That’s been our biggest challenge, as we’ve never done high-end before, but we have 20 full-time staff on-hand to make sure our members receive the attention they need.

“In line with this philosophy, although our club is clearly premium, we haven’t opted for luxury at all cost. We spent i4m on the new club, but we didn’t want to be ostentatious. We’ve used nice, tactile materials – leather sofas and chairs in the lounge, good quality wooden floors and so on. But a lot of the work we’ve done to make the club really welcoming has been behind the scenes – the sort of things people might not immediately notice.

“For example, our air is filtered so it’s very clean, and we have diffusers of very gentle scent throughout the club. Each locker is also individually aerated. Meanwhile, our audio system allows us to split the club into four distinct areas, so we can play different music in different zones to create distinct moods.

“We also worked very hard with our lighting engineers to ensure that, even though the club is located in a basement, it offers a warm welcome. We wanted to create an immediate sense of calm when people walked into the club from the busy Place de la Bastille.”

Lighting masterpiece
The lighting is, in fact, the aspect of the club of which Gueguen is most proud, and you can see why. It’s gentle and calming – no glaring ‘you must work out now’ spotlights or fluorescent strips – but at the same time it successfully creates an uplifting, positive feel throughout the club. The light is adjusted throughout the day to help maintain this sense of calm.

Club Med Gym management worked closely with architectural firm Studio Marc Hertrich & Nicolas Adnet to create distinct spaces throughout the club, each offering a different atmosphere – again helped by the lighting. As you walk down the stairs into reception, the lounge to the right is mellow and inviting. Next to the lounge, behind a glass wall, is the main group exercise studio – a lovely 130sq m, dark wood sprung-floored space where the lighting, although adjustable, never seems to interfere with the relaxed feel in the lounge. A second smaller, open-fronted studio space sits alongside, equipped by NOHrD for the stretching/core sessions, which maintains an intimate feel in spite of the lack of door.

Meanwhile, in the changing rooms, you come to a relaxation area – featuring pale stone recliners and a waterfall wall – on the way to the sauna, steamroom and ice fountain. This area is peaceful and bright, but with such a warm light that it feels immediately soothing.

But the lighting pièce de resistance is located in the gym, which lies straight ahead as you come down the stairs into reception. The 74-station, Technogym-equipped fitness suite uses the bold colour scheme of the entire club – black, granite, red, grey – with padded red leather pillars that splay out into round sofas at the bottom. But what grabs the attention is the far wall – a curved wall of light, overlaid with a mirrored tree motif, which is made brighter or darker depending on the light conditions outside; if it’s raining, the light in the gym is brighter. Not only is this very effective in creating a positive feeling, but the wall itself is a beautiful art installation.

To the right of the gym lies a weights area with heavier lifting options – Pure Strength from Technogym – benefiting from cooler air conditioning. To break this space up further, so people don’t feel packed in together, there’s equipment at the bottom of a stairwell, more machines halfway up the stairs and more at the top.

Beyond this weights area is a functional training zone – Pavigym flooring, an adidas punchbag (the club has an exclusive five-year partnership with adidas for its staff uniforms), a Reebok rebounder and hooks for TRX suspension training – and a PT studio. Over 10 per cent of members currently do PT, at l70–80 an hour.

As a result of all these distinct areas, while only 1,400sq m in size, the club feels larger – an effect which is assisted by the use of mirrors throughout. And with the uncramped layout of the gym, as well as the way space has been made for living areas, it’s easy to see how it’s successfully appealing to both experienced and new gym members, enticing people to work out as well as hang out at the club afterwards.

Expanding the brand
So given his comments about the future of the fitness sector being high-end, and the success of Pure Club Med Gym to date, what are Gueguen’s plans for the brand going forward? “I’d like to create more Pure Club Med Gym sites: depending on the demographics of the area, I’d prioritise Pure over standard Club Med Gyms. But as I’ve said before, it’s all about the location.

“One option might be to upgrade some of our Waou clubs, but that’s yet to be decided. We could also potentially upgrade some of our Silhouette clubs to launch the Pure brand in Switzerland.

“But it all depends on financing: 21 Centrale Partners, the private equity fund to which Club Med Gym currently belongs, has been instrumental in our expansion in the last five years, allowing us to acquire Silhouette and open Pure Club Med Gym and the upcoming Club Med Gym in April.

“Longer term, who knows? In my own dreams, I’d like to go into new markets where there’s real potential – China, India. But even if that doesn’t happen, we have a strong urban concept, so at the very least I’d like to go into other European capital cities, as well as continuing to expand Pure Club Med Gym across Paris.”

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features

New opening: Bastille bijou

Kate Cracknell pays a visit to Club Med Gym’s latest new opening – the high-end Pure Club Med Gym, located on Paris’ Place de la Bastille

Published in Health Club Management 2013 issue 2

“Budget clubs have not killed the market. There’s still plenty of space for mid-market and luxury operators,” states Franck Gueguen, CEO of health club operator Club Med Gym, which operates 22 sites across Paris, as well as 23 clubs in Switzerland under the Silhouette brand. Twenty-one of the Club Med Gym sites are mid-market, although five – operating under the Waou Club Med Gym brand – are premium mid-market.

In spite of this current bias towards the mid-market, Gueguen is very clear in his opinions. “The future of the sector is high-end,” he says. And the success of Pure Club Med Gym – the company’s first venture into high-end facilities, which opened in June 2012 – certainly suggests there’s some truth in this statement.

Creating ‘bien-être’
Gueguen had, he explains, wanted to launch a high-end gym concept for some time, but realised location was the key. “Club Med Gym has been around for 34 years and we already had 21 clubs across Paris, with a 22nd in the pipeline that will open in April 2013. That made it particularly hard to find the right location for a Pure Club Med Gym.

“Then an opportunity arose in the Opéra Bastille – our new club is located within the Opéra building, in a basement space formerly occupied by a book/music store. As the Opéra belongs to the State, we had to go through a public bid process. It took two and a half years to secure the site, which we now rent from the Opéra. But we were confident it was the location we needed to launch our new concept.”

He continues: “In Paris, there are very few luxury clubs, and in the 12th arrondissement – Bastille – the demographics are high-end. It’s a very fashionable residential area experiencing a lot of growth. We knew the demand was there for a truly premium club.”

Indeed, in the first six months, the club – which has set a cap on member numbers, limiting it to 2,000 to maintain a sense of exclusivity – had already signed up 1,245 members, split roughly 50:50 men to women, paying i150 a month. Interestingly, 67 per cent of these had never been gym members before. “You have to remember that, in France, total market penetration is only 5.4 per cent,” says Gueguen. “Nevertheless, with Pure Club Med Gym, we’ve created a model that’s very specifically bringing new people into health and fitness. We’ve created a space where people feel good – a club to which they want to belong, where they feel comfortable and want to spend time.”

That sense of feeling good – of ‘bien-être’, as they say in France – lies at the heart of the Pure Club Med Gym concept, as Gueguen explains: “It’s about making our members feel at home, not necessarily in the décor or the feel of the club, which has been designed with a private members’ club in mind, but in the attention to detail.

“When members come into the club, every single one is greeted by a member of staff who comes out to welcome them in. We have a partnership with Babyliss, so we can lend members anything they might need – hairdryer, straighteners and so on. We have iPads in our lounge area, as well as newspapers and magazines and bowls of fruit, so people can relax with a coffee after their workout. We’ve already found that Pure Club Med Gym members spend, on average, 25 minutes more at the club than members spend at our other sites.

“So yes, we focus heavily on service – that’s a key USP for us. We offer dry cleaning, free towels, discounts on parking. There’s a member of staff on the gym floor at all times, and they really do talk to members. When it’s time for a class, rather than people having to queue, the instructor will go and find them, and we limit classes to a maximum of 30 people. Similarly, we offer a 15-minute, small group abs/stretch class every hour, and again the instructor will go around the gym encouraging people to take part – people don’t stretch properly otherwise, and it’s very important.

“For us, high-end is determined less by the facilities and more by training staff how to properly treat members. That’s been our biggest challenge, as we’ve never done high-end before, but we have 20 full-time staff on-hand to make sure our members receive the attention they need.

“In line with this philosophy, although our club is clearly premium, we haven’t opted for luxury at all cost. We spent i4m on the new club, but we didn’t want to be ostentatious. We’ve used nice, tactile materials – leather sofas and chairs in the lounge, good quality wooden floors and so on. But a lot of the work we’ve done to make the club really welcoming has been behind the scenes – the sort of things people might not immediately notice.

“For example, our air is filtered so it’s very clean, and we have diffusers of very gentle scent throughout the club. Each locker is also individually aerated. Meanwhile, our audio system allows us to split the club into four distinct areas, so we can play different music in different zones to create distinct moods.

“We also worked very hard with our lighting engineers to ensure that, even though the club is located in a basement, it offers a warm welcome. We wanted to create an immediate sense of calm when people walked into the club from the busy Place de la Bastille.”

Lighting masterpiece
The lighting is, in fact, the aspect of the club of which Gueguen is most proud, and you can see why. It’s gentle and calming – no glaring ‘you must work out now’ spotlights or fluorescent strips – but at the same time it successfully creates an uplifting, positive feel throughout the club. The light is adjusted throughout the day to help maintain this sense of calm.

Club Med Gym management worked closely with architectural firm Studio Marc Hertrich & Nicolas Adnet to create distinct spaces throughout the club, each offering a different atmosphere – again helped by the lighting. As you walk down the stairs into reception, the lounge to the right is mellow and inviting. Next to the lounge, behind a glass wall, is the main group exercise studio – a lovely 130sq m, dark wood sprung-floored space where the lighting, although adjustable, never seems to interfere with the relaxed feel in the lounge. A second smaller, open-fronted studio space sits alongside, equipped by NOHrD for the stretching/core sessions, which maintains an intimate feel in spite of the lack of door.

Meanwhile, in the changing rooms, you come to a relaxation area – featuring pale stone recliners and a waterfall wall – on the way to the sauna, steamroom and ice fountain. This area is peaceful and bright, but with such a warm light that it feels immediately soothing.

But the lighting pièce de resistance is located in the gym, which lies straight ahead as you come down the stairs into reception. The 74-station, Technogym-equipped fitness suite uses the bold colour scheme of the entire club – black, granite, red, grey – with padded red leather pillars that splay out into round sofas at the bottom. But what grabs the attention is the far wall – a curved wall of light, overlaid with a mirrored tree motif, which is made brighter or darker depending on the light conditions outside; if it’s raining, the light in the gym is brighter. Not only is this very effective in creating a positive feeling, but the wall itself is a beautiful art installation.

To the right of the gym lies a weights area with heavier lifting options – Pure Strength from Technogym – benefiting from cooler air conditioning. To break this space up further, so people don’t feel packed in together, there’s equipment at the bottom of a stairwell, more machines halfway up the stairs and more at the top.

Beyond this weights area is a functional training zone – Pavigym flooring, an adidas punchbag (the club has an exclusive five-year partnership with adidas for its staff uniforms), a Reebok rebounder and hooks for TRX suspension training – and a PT studio. Over 10 per cent of members currently do PT, at l70–80 an hour.

As a result of all these distinct areas, while only 1,400sq m in size, the club feels larger – an effect which is assisted by the use of mirrors throughout. And with the uncramped layout of the gym, as well as the way space has been made for living areas, it’s easy to see how it’s successfully appealing to both experienced and new gym members, enticing people to work out as well as hang out at the club afterwards.

Expanding the brand
So given his comments about the future of the fitness sector being high-end, and the success of Pure Club Med Gym to date, what are Gueguen’s plans for the brand going forward? “I’d like to create more Pure Club Med Gym sites: depending on the demographics of the area, I’d prioritise Pure over standard Club Med Gyms. But as I’ve said before, it’s all about the location.

“One option might be to upgrade some of our Waou clubs, but that’s yet to be decided. We could also potentially upgrade some of our Silhouette clubs to launch the Pure brand in Switzerland.

“But it all depends on financing: 21 Centrale Partners, the private equity fund to which Club Med Gym currently belongs, has been instrumental in our expansion in the last five years, allowing us to acquire Silhouette and open Pure Club Med Gym and the upcoming Club Med Gym in April.

“Longer term, who knows? In my own dreams, I’d like to go into new markets where there’s real potential – China, India. But even if that doesn’t happen, we have a strong urban concept, so at the very least I’d like to go into other European capital cities, as well as continuing to expand Pure Club Med Gym across Paris.”

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

My vision was to create a platform that could improve the sport for lifters at all levels and attract more people, similar to how Strava, Peloton and Zwift have in other sports
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