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		<title>Top Gyms 2012</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2012 10:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Health & Wellness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exercise]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Top Gyms]]></category>
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			<p>Yes, we know it&#8217;s January—month of those dreaded resolutions—and<br />
no, we&#8217;re not trying to guilt trip you. (Okay, maybe just a little.) But<br />
 seriously, there&#8217;s no excuse not to join a local gym at this point. You<br />
 say you have no time? There are plenty of 24-hour gyms in the region.<br />
Afraid to be around the body-beautiful people? There are lots of gyms<br />
that cater to an older, more laid-back, or even out-of-shape clientele.<br />
Think you can&#8217;t afford the fees? At least two of our featured gyms are<br />
$10 a month. Basically, whatever your particular version of a perfect<br />
gym might be, it&#8217;s out there. Here are 18 great places to start.</p>
<h3><strong>Bare Hills Racquet and Fitness Club</strong></h3>
<p><em>1420 Clarkview Rd., 410-823-2500</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Owners Jack and Nancy Dwyer have<br />
transformed a fitness center that once housed a ski slope made of carpet<br />
 into a modern facility equipped with six tennis courts, eight squash<br />
courts, a steam room and sauna, cycling room, and yoga studio. There&#8217;s<br />
also plenty of variety in a large upstairs cardio room. It was named the<br />
 2011 United States Tennis Association Facility of the Year.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> &#8220;It&#8217;s definitely got a family feel,&#8221;<br />
 says director of member relations Melinda Capone of the gym&#8217;s friendly<br />
vibe. Bare Hills also reaches out to the community, offering free<br />
workouts for Baltimore City firefighters and police officers.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s hot:</strong> Bare Hills members have a wide range of<br />
class options, from the popular Bosu (like a dome-shaped medicine ball)<br />
to yoga fusion to Ladies Lunch League (tennis). Squash and tennis are<br />
taught by the pros, including world-famous squash director Lefika<br />
Ragontse. Thirty-minute classes offered mid-weekdays, give professionals<br />
 a quick workout.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Starting this month, Bare Hills<br />
will offer Piloxing, a combination of Pilates, dance, and boxing. In<br />
addition, Soul Body—a yoga studio—operates classes out of the same<br />
building and offers some of its classes to Bare Hills members.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> &#8220;Everybody fills their own niche,&#8221;<br />
owner Nancy Dwyer says of her staff. Regina Roesner hosts about 20<br />
Gravity training classes each week, using the same equipment Tiger Woods<br />
 trains on. Truet Purnell recently won a national bodybuilding<br />
competition, and the Fitness Center has 14 personal trainers on staff.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $64-137/month; annual tennis membership fees are $99-41.</p>
<h3><strong>Brick Bodies</strong></h3>
<p><em>Several locations, including 212 W. Padonia Rd., Timonium, 410-252-5280</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The Padonia location started as a<br />
racquetball club with a bar, hot tub, and cigarette machine. Since<br />
owners Lynne and Victor Brick purchased the gym in 1985, the space has<br />
been reconfigured to include a basketball half-court and several large<br />
equipment rooms, featuring modern-day apparatus like ellipticals, cross<br />
trainers, and Stairmasters on two floors. There&#8217;s a joie de vivre among<br />
the exercise enthusiasts, and it&#8217;s not unusual to see Lynne Brick in<br />
their midst.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> The median age is around 41, with most members between ages 25 and 65, says Josh Gerber, the company&#8217;s marketing director.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s hot:</strong> TRX suspension training, Brick Boxing,<br />
Baltimore Barre (&#8220;a cross between Joseph Pilates and Jane Fonda,&#8221; says<br />
Brick), spinning (&#8220;Everyone knows how to ride a bike,&#8221; she explains of<br />
its popularity), and a focus on 30-minute workouts for the<br />
time-challenged. A sign outside the building reminds members, &#8220;Have you<br />
had your quickie today?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The club opens at 4:30 a.m. for<br />
early birds on weekdays, has a Little Brick&#8217;s program with structured<br />
child care, has group personal training, as well as individual sessions,<br />
 and hundreds of classes, including Zumba, body jam, and body jump.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Certified personal trainer and group<br />
 exercise instructor Pam Monacelli has been at Brick Bodies since 1993.<br />
&#8220;What I truly enjoy is seeing someone finish something that they didn&#8217;t<br />
think they could do,&#8221; she says. &#8220;I firmly believe that we all have it in<br />
 us to do things that we never imagined we could do.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $40-50/month; $60 includes a trainer twice a week.</p>
<h3><strong>Canton Club</strong></h3>
<p><em>2780-D Lighthouse Point East, 410-276-5544</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The one-level layout, on the second<br />
floor of a waterfront building in Canton, has all the amenities of a<br />
state-of-the-art gym with a spectacular view of the harbor. &#8220;It&#8217;s like a<br />
 cruise ship that doesn&#8217;t move,&#8221; says Canton Club&#8217;s fitness director<br />
Jacki Dalsimer. Clients can work out on treadmills and other gym<br />
equipment while gazing at boats and Baltimore&#8217;s skyline. Another draw is<br />
 the &#8220;wow room,&#8221; as co-owner Amy Passen calls the area with silk purple<br />
hammocks suspended from the ceiling for Air Yoga and the attached<br />
FitWalls, where clients hold onto outcroppings on the &#8220;walls&#8221; to build<br />
strength and flexibility.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> The co-ed clients range from mid-20s<br />
 to mid-60s, with some members in their 70s. &#8220;[Empty] nesters are a<br />
growing population,&#8221; says Passen, as well as young parents. (Canton Club<br />
 recently added a daycare program called Canton Cubs.)</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s hot:</strong> In addition to Air Yoga and the FitWall<br />
concept— Canton Club is the only gym on the East Coast to offer this<br />
equipment, Passen says— the gym has TRX suspension training, basically<br />
using suspended straps for whole-body fitness. There&#8217;s also boot camp,<br />
yoga, weight-loss programs, spinning, kettlebells, and . . . tires (only<br />
 these big rubber rounds are used in group-fitness classes for flipping<br />
over, pushing back and forth, and even hopping in the center).</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The gym is open 24 hours a day in a<br />
 secure environment with parking, which eliminates most excuses not to<br />
exercise. The gym prides itself on encouraging camaraderie among the<br />
staff and its club members. &#8220;Without the alcohol, it&#8217;s a very<br />
Cheers-like environment,&#8221; says Passen, who owns the gym with her husband<br />
 Marty, a physician.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Fitness director Jacki Dalsimer says<br />
 club members are her motivation. &#8220;The &#8216;thank you&#8217;s&#8217; I get for changing<br />
people&#8217;s lives are why I love my job,&#8221; she reports. &#8220;I am passionate<br />
about not only helping my personal clients but all members at Canton<br />
Club reach and exceed their goals.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $64-89/month, plus extra for personal<br />
training; Premium Coaching Option, $180/month, includes three monthly<br />
one-on-one personal-training sessions.</p>
<h3><strong>Curves for Women</strong></h3>
<p><em>733 W. 40th St., #20, 410-467-8700</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> In this no-boys-allowed gym, there<br />
are a dozen or more exercise machines of different kinds to work<br />
different parts of your body. Give them 30 minutes a day, three times a<br />
week, and work a set number of minutes on each machine for cardio and<br />
strength, and you&#8217;re done.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Curves has a unique clientele: Its<br />
250-odd members are, obviously, women only. Many are a bit<br />
self-conscious about the, er, unOlympic state of their physiques, some<br />
just prefer working out without the distraction of guys. These ladies,<br />
ages 10-87, for the most part aren&#8217;t training for a triathlon, but just<br />
want to get fitter. Manager Apple Koekemoer and her four staffers train<br />
newcomers on the circuit, do fitness assessments, and help members set<br />
goals.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s hot:</strong> What&#8217;s cool about Curves is its honest<br />
place in the fitness universe: Come in any physical shape and in any<br />
clothes you want, girls, (we saw not one member in Spandex on a Monday<br />
at midday) and get fitter in an environment where self-consciousness is a<br />
 non-issue.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Insurance will, in many cases, pay<br />
 for the Curves program, considered a wellness program by participating<br />
carriers and employers.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> &#8220;We&#8217;re not bodybuilders,&#8221; says<br />
Koekemoer, &#8220;we&#8217;re just about fitness.&#8221; She&#8217;s a true believer, by the<br />
way: Eight years ago, at age 35, the former bookkeeper needed this same<br />
non-judgmental environment to get her strength back after breast-cancer<br />
treatment. When the manager spot came open, she knew it was meant to be.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> About $40/month, annually.</p>
<h3><strong>Downtown Athletic Club</strong></h3>
<p><em>210 E. Centre St. 410-332-0906</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Because it&#8217;s open 24 hours, this<br />
100-year-old, 66,000-square-foot converted train depot is never overly<br />
crowded. Along with the normal roster of free weights and exercise<br />
equipment, look for free parking, racquet ball and squash courts, a<br />
basketball court, an indoor pool with sauna and steam room, a rubber<br />
track, and a boxing ring. The vibe is &#8220;chill,&#8221; says lifestyle consultant<br />
 Karen Codd. &#8220;It&#8217;s state-of-the-art, but not posh.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> The gyms boasts an eclectic mix of<br />
clients—downtown dwellers, workers, and commuters. It&#8217;s a true &#8220;melting<br />
pot,&#8221; Codd says. Both Gov. Martin O&#8217;Malley and former Mayor Sheila Dixon<br />
 are regulars.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s hot:</strong> TRX suspension training, which uses<br />
cables to improve core strength and flexibility. &#8220;You can see an<br />
85-year-old next to a bodybuilder,&#8221; says group fitness director Ron<br />
Crognale.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The Freshfit bar and grill, where<br />
you can go for a beer or a sandwich and watch the game after your<br />
workout. Also, since the DAC is part of the Merritt Athletic Club<br />
network, you get the six week results guarantee and can use your<br />
membership to work out at any of Merritt&#8217;s nine regional locations.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Personal training manager Heidi<br />
Shaneybrook, a former Division III soccer player at Salisbury<br />
University, has a background in physiology and kinesiology and, with her<br />
 own history of a bad back and balky knees, knows how to maximize a<br />
workout for those with sports injuries. &#8220;She makes the workout as<br />
enjoyable as it is intense,&#8221; says Crognale.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $51-89/month.</p>
<h3><strong>Federal Hill Fitness</strong></h3>
<p><em>39 E. Cross St., 410-752-3004</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Located amongst the bars and<br />
restaurants on Cross Street, Federal Hill Fitness has a modern, rehabbed<br />
 feel. There’s a second-floor loft, exposed brick, and Robert McClintock<br />
 paintings donning the walls. The main floor has an open area for<br />
cardio, the downstairs is for core, and the second floor has kettlebells<br />
 and weights and a studio for classes.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Much like its sister gym, MV<br />
Fitness, the club’s clientele comes straight from the neighborhood.<br />
“Most members are younger, athletic, and look like people you’d<br />
typically see in Federal Hill,” says owner Andrea Shelby. “Those of us<br />
who live here walk everywhere, so it makes sense that we’d walk to our<br />
gym, too.”</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Federal Hill Fitness’s most popular<br />
program is the outdoor boot camp. “It’s a seriously butt-kicking,<br />
competitive class,” Shelby says. “There’s a lot of pain and a lot of<br />
results.” The boot camp meets three times a week for four weeks at 6<br />
a.m. on the top of Federal Hill. “There’s nothing quite like seeing the<br />
sunrise over the Baltimore skyline and knowing that your day is off to a<br />
 great, healthy start,” she says.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Shelby explains that because the<br />
gym is a smaller size (about 600 members), there is a more personal<br />
connection. “We’ve been open for 10 years and have so many members that<br />
have been here from the beginning,” she says. “We have a great retention<br />
 rate. People only leave if they move.”</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Trainer Reese Ashe has a background<br />
in mixed martial arts and wrestling, and he specializes in<br />
group-training classes (like the hardcore, outdoor boot camp) and<br />
kickboxing. (Plus, we named him “Best Personal Trainer” in 2010). “He<br />
has the added glitter of being a part of the club from the beginning,”<br />
Shelby says. “He’s truly an exceptional part of the team.”</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $49-69/month; a personal training membership<br />
is $299/month. (Federal Hill Fitness members can also use the MV Fitness<br />
 facility.)</p>
<h3><strong>LifeBridge Health &#038; Fitness</strong></h3>
<p><em>1836 Greene Tree Rd., Pikesville, 410-484-6800</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> We should probably tell you what<br />
they don’t have here; that’d be a much shorter list. The gym has more<br />
than 200 cardio machines, each with individual TVs; heated saltwater lap<br />
 pool, plus a therapy pool; three group-exercise studios; an indoor<br />
walking track; rock-climbing wall; swanky locker rooms with hot tubs,<br />
saunas, and steam rooms; free Wi-Fi; cafe; pro shop selling Lululemon<br />
and Under Armour gear; and a LifeBridge Health physical therapy practice<br />
 on premises.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Because of the gym’s association<br />
with LifeBridge Health (the parent organization of Sinai and Northwest<br />
Hospitals) and its Pikesville location, you’ll see lots of suburban<br />
boomers working up a sweat as part of their rehabilitation regimens. On<br />
the other end of the spectrum, many elite athletes, including some<br />
Ravens, stop by to partake in the Parisi Speed School, a conditioning<br />
program designed to improve performance.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Zumba is by far the most popular class<br />
on the schedule, but strength-training/body-sculpting classes like Body<br />
by Barre and Pilates also attract a crowd.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The one-tenth of a mile indoor<br />
track, which encircles the upstairs, provides an opportunity to release<br />
oneself from the yoke of the treadmill and actually, you know, go<br />
somewhere when you walk. The rock-climbing wall has beginner and<br />
advanced sides. And the pool is always a toasty 83 degrees.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Word around the locker rooms is, if<br />
you really want results STAT!, the person to see is former Towson<br />
University-hockey-player-turned-personal-trainer Billy Wunderlich. It<br />
won’t be easy, and you’ll have to work for it, but he’ll make sure you<br />
do.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> Standard memberships/$89 per month.</p>
<h3><strong>Lifetime Fitness</strong></h3>
<p><em>7220 Lee DeForest Dr., Columbia, 410-953-0022</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Inside this Columbia gym—possibly<br />
the largest fitness facility in the state of Maryland—you’ll find three<br />
pools, two indoor, including one with amusement-park style slides, and<br />
one outdoor, also with slide, a zero-depth entry “beach” and a hot tub;<br />
two full-length basketball courts; a 30-plus-foot-tall climbing wall;<br />
400 pieces of cardio and Nautilus equipment; four class studios,<br />
including dedicated yoga/Pilates and “cycle theater”; 26 full-time<br />
personal trainers; a full-service restaurant plus an outdoor bistro in<br />
summer; two squash courts; two racquetball courts; a full-service spa;<br />
and a child-care center complete with a maze, eight computers, a<br />
miniature basketball court, and a full playground. (Whew!)</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Lifetime works hard to provide<br />
something for everyone, from the babies in the child-care center to the<br />
elderly clients in the gentle yoga class, but director Joel Schlossberg<br />
says the biggest segment of members are family-oriented people in their<br />
30s, who stop by on their commutes to Baltimore or D.C.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> The Zumba classes are big, as are<br />
classes in the spinning studio, with 52 stationary bikes and a giant<br />
video screen that projects segments of the Tour de France.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> This gym is open 24/7, 365 days a<br />
year. There is also a full-service summer camp for kids. The adult<br />
basketball league, Ultimate Hoops, keeps statistics for all players<br />
online and sends the winning teams to a national tournament where they<br />
play top teams from other Lifetime gyms around the country.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Marnice Sigur, 42, had an epiphany<br />
two years ago when her mother was diagnosed with colorectal cancer,<br />
diabetes, and hypertension. Concerned about her own health, she became a<br />
 fitness fanatic, losing 82 pounds in a year and studying to be a<br />
personal trainer. Now, she works at Lifetime helping other overweight<br />
and obese people change their lives.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $80.95/month for adults, up to $155/month for families.</p>
<h3><strong>Maryland Athletic Club, Harbor East</strong></h3>
<p><em>655 President St., 410-625-5000</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> MAC Harbor East doesn’t feel like a<br />
gym, but more of a spa smack in the middle of downtown. Along with<br />
top-flight weights and machines, the 54,000-square-foot facility is<br />
complete with individual steam showers, salt-water pools, and an<br />
Internet cafe so that gym doesn’t feel like such a chore after all.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> General manager Mike Hines estimates<br />
 that about two-thirds of MAC Harbor East’s members are under the age of<br />
 40. Most of the members are downtown professionals who like the<br />
convenience of a gym near the office. “It’s like a Who’s Who of<br />
Baltimore’s workforce,” Hines says.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Hines says that, without a doubt, the<br />
most popular program is the MAC Blast, which is a boot-camp program that<br />
 also includes 10 consecutive days of intense workouts all over the<br />
club. Hour-long classes include boxing, yoga, core training, and<br />
swimming. “It’s really a jumpstart if you feel your workout program has<br />
gotten stagnant,” Hines says.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The spa-like feel of MAC Harbor<br />
East is certainly distinct among downtown gyms. The facility also has<br />
three indoor pools for lap swimming, aquatic classes, and kids play.<br />
There are also squash courts.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Jason Williams is one of Harbor<br />
East’s most popular trainers. “He does every type of training possible,”<br />
 Hines says. “From stretching to running assessments and Pilates.” With a<br />
 degree in sports medicine, Williams also specializes in rehab and<br />
sports-specific training for MAC’s more athletic members.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $79-99/month (MAC Harbor East members may also use the Timonium MAC facility.)</p>
<h3><strong>Maryland Athletic Club, Timonium</strong></h3>
<p><em>110 W. Timonium Rd., Timonium, 410-453-9111</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Owners Liz and Tim Rhode had a<br />
vision in the mid-’90s that turned an old warehouse into today’s<br />
gleaming 64,000-square-foot fitness center, complete with swimming pools<br />
 and a cafe. The MAC, as its familiarly called, recently celebrated its<br />
15th year with a blowout party.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> The average age is 50, with 20<br />
percent of its 7,000 members age 70 plus, says Sharon Nevins, the MAC’s<br />
marketing vice president.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> TRX suspension training, small-group<br />
personal training, boot camp, yoga, and classes like spinning, step, and<br />
 Zumba. “The buzz word is functional training,” says Nevins. “We want to<br />
 support what you do in everyday life.”</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> There are two personal-training<br />
studios, a Kids Club for child care, a lap pool, two therapy pools, a<br />
cardio area that is quieter and more private than the bustling main MAC,<br />
 which has its own array of machines on the first floor and two<br />
mezzanines, and a partnership with an on-site physical-therapy company.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Billy Delorbe has been a trainer at<br />
the MAC for more than seven years. “Helping people is one of my favorite<br />
 things to do,” he says. “I love working on new structures, different<br />
exercises, and coming up with ways to keep my clients motivated. Trying<br />
new exercise combinations keeps it interesting.”</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $69-99/month (Timonium MAC members may also use the Harbor East MAC facility.)</p>
<h3><strong>Meadow Mill Athletic Club</strong></h3>
<p><em>8600 Clipper Mill Rd., 410-235-7000</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> A meandering labyrinth of rooms<br />
inside a renovated 19th-century mill complex, Meadow Mill has rooms of<br />
cardio and Cybex resistance weight-training equipment, two<br />
group-exercise rooms, a spinning studio, a Pilates studio, and 14 single<br />
 and two doubles squash courts.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Squash enthusiasts make up a sizable<br />
 portion of enrollment but young urbanites from nearby Hampden and<br />
Clipper Mill are also represented.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Did we mention squash? It gets a lot of<br />
play here. The club regularly hosts international, national, state, and<br />
in-house tournaments. Free squash clinics are held weekly for members.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Though Meadow Mill is best known<br />
for its squash, the gym also offers a full range of fitness classes,<br />
including an aerial acrobatics studio. The high-ceilinged room is<br />
outfitted with fabric drapery on which professional aerialist Robin<br />
Miller will teach you the tricks of the acrobatics trade.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Miller has performed acrobatics in<br />
Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe and offers instruction on aerial hoop, hammock,<br />
 and fabric routines.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> With no annual contract required—— ever——<br />
Meadow Mill is one of the more flexible places around. Regular<br />
membership is $75 per month.</p>
<h3><strong>Merritt Athletic Club Canton</strong></h3>
<p><em>3401 Boston St., 410-563-0225 (and several other locations)</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The official club of the Baltimore<br />
Ravens cheerleaders, this spotless 24-hour club has an eye-popping<br />
spinning studio, an indoor/outdoor pool with a view of the harbor, a<br />
basketball court, two squash courts, a full-service day spa,<br />
state-of-the-art exercise equipment, plus 70 group fitness classes<br />
offered each week.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Mostly business professionals in<br />
their 20s, 30s, and 40s who are “all here for the same reason—— to get<br />
fit,” says sales manager Doug Wood.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Group personal training classes (usually<br />
 4 to 8 people), a great way to get personalized training at lower price<br />
 points. The new focus is functional training, says Wood—— “training<br />
that relates to everyday activity.”</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> The gym’s $30,000 light and sound<br />
system can turn a spinning class into a uniquely entertaining and<br />
energizing experience. Additionally, the gym’s indoor/outdoor pool is<br />
the “place to be” on weekends. There is a cheerful day-care center.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Former wrestler Mark Frear is “not a<br />
 kid”—— he’s in his 40s—— and his experience shows. He’s “well-versed in<br />
 the anatomy of the body,” says Wood, and has an insatiable curiosity<br />
about fitness and health. “If a client is on medication, he’ll do<br />
research to find out how that affects the body,” says Wood. His workout<br />
style is reportedly intense without being intimidating.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $51-89/month. (Membership can be used to work out at any of Merritt’s nine regional locations.)</p>
<h3><strong>MV Fitness Athletic Club</strong></h3>
<p><em>1016 N. Charles St., 410-878-2990</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The four-year-old gym is located in a<br />
 converted Mt. Vernon mansion catty-corner from The Belvedere Hotel.<br />
Inside, there is original marble, hardwood floors, and fixtures, like a<br />
beautiful chandelier in the front room. The bottom floor (the cellar) is<br />
 for weight training, the first floor uses the former living room for<br />
cardio, the kitchen for the classes, the dining room for spin class, and<br />
 the smoking lounge (!) for Pilates.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Andrea Shelby, who also owns Federal<br />
 Hill Fitness, explains that both gyms specifically serve the<br />
neighborhoods they’re in. “Mt. Vernon is the cultural center of the<br />
city,” Shelby says. “So we get people from the symphony, we get art<br />
students, we get the whole gamut.”</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Reflective of a larger trend in the<br />
industry, one of the most popular programs is Fit Club. This<br />
group-training program is designed as a weight-loss clinic, where you<br />
train in a small group setting three-times a week for six weeks. “Fit<br />
Club is very results-driven,” Shelby says. “You keep a food journal, we<br />
host seminars, all while you’re working out with one of our trainers.”</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> You’d be hard-pressed to find a<br />
prettier gym out there, especially one with more sunlight pouring<br />
through all the rooms. Plus, there are private, locked showers—each<br />
stocked with toiletries paid for by the gym. The spinning bikes face a<br />
giant window overlooking Charles Street.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Guy Cragwell has been training<br />
clients for more than five years, and is also a certified nutritionist.<br />
He specializes in achieving weight-loss goals through plyometrics and<br />
functional movements. “He could take a piece of wood and make it into a<br />
workout,” Shelby says.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $49-69/month; a personal training membership<br />
is $299/month. (MV Fitness members can also use the Federal Hill Fitness<br />
 facility.)</p>
<h3><strong>Planet Fitness</strong></h3>
<p><em>11989-A Reisterstown Rd., Reisterstown, 410-702-4321 (and 14 other locations)</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Each location of this no-frills<br />
24-hour franchise encompasses about 20,000 square feet of workout<br />
equipment including, cardio and strength-training machines,<br />
free-weights, a circuit area, tanning beds, and locker rooms. But Planet<br />
 Fitness is more notable for what it doesn’t have. In an effort to keep<br />
prices affordable, it eschews cafes, saunas, group fitness classes, and<br />
other optional accoutrements.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> “It’s all ages, races, sizes, and shapes,” says Josh Gerber, the marketing director for Planet Fitness’s parent company.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Planet Fitness does not forsake all<br />
comfort. The tanning beds get lots of use and are complimentary<br />
depending on membership level. Relaxing leather massage chairs are<br />
another perk.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> There is a strict no-muscleheads<br />
policy at Planet Fitness. The workout floor is a bona fide “no grunting<br />
zone,” and an alarm will sound if someone slams weights around like a<br />
Mr. Universe contestant.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Planet Fitness doesn’t have personal trainers, but they do have fitness staffers at each gym to offer explanation or guidance.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> Standard membership is $10/month, with a $29 start-up fee.</p>
<h3><strong>PRO Fit Rx</strong></h3>
<p><em>15 W. Aylesbury Rd., Timonium, 410-828-7948</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> New gym in a big commercial space<br />
that has room after room of all the latest hardware, from cardio<br />
machines, strength-building equipment, and weights to the usual parade<br />
of flat-screen TVs. There are also group sessions, including Zumba,<br />
kick-boxing, and boot-camp classes, as well as personal trainers.<br />
Suffering from a touch of gym-germ-phobia? Then you’ll appreciate the<br />
hygienic attractions of a spotless new locker and shower area.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> This would be a good choice for<br />
people who know exactly what they want out of a gym and don’t want to<br />
pay higher fees for things they don’t want: The membership fees follow<br />
the a là carte model, so you only pay for what you use.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Beginning this month, those who just want to take a lot of classes can pay a minimal fee to drop in on any class they like.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> This place is truly for the person<br />
 who doesn’t want to be held hostage by their club: You pay month to<br />
month, and several memberships require no contract.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> “We pride ourselves on hiring<br />
personal trainers who not only have years of experience, but hold the<br />
most extensive certification in the personal- training industry,” says<br />
co-owner Diane Baklor.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $30-60/month.</p>
<h3><strong>Spunk Fitness </strong></h3>
<p><em>1433 York Rd., Lutherville, 410-828-4653</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The place doesn’t look like much<br />
from the outside, being on the backside of the oh-so-’80s shopping plaza<br />
 at York and Seminary, but the location (right off the Beltway) is easy<br />
for the greater-Towson area, and it offers a good range of cardio and<br />
strength equipment, plus personal and group training.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Sure, over in the weight area, it’s<br />
mostly young males strutting their stuff, but we’re not talking about<br />
the Mr. Universe type. (In fact, there’s a sign that says, “No grunting<br />
or dropping of weights.”) More popular is the cardio side, with rows of<br />
the latest high-tech treadmills and 50-inch flat screens, where you’ll<br />
find folks ages 16 to 65, with a good number of professional types who<br />
look like they came at midday to get a break from their office cubicles<br />
(and who appreciate the full lockers and steam rooms).</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> There’s a reason that the Lutherville<br />
and Ellicott City branches of this three-state chain have more than<br />
20,000 members—— and we think it’s probably a price that’s hard to beat.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> If you need to work out your frustrations at 3 a.m., this is the place for you: It’s open 24 hours on weekdays.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Spunks’s most popular trainer is<br />
probably Katie Ferris, 25, who was pursuing a master’s in biology at<br />
Towson University when she caught the fitness bug. Says Ferris: “I do<br />
both basic training and conditioning with a wide range of clients, some<br />
who want low-intensity programs, others, who might be training for<br />
competition, high intensity” including rehab for clients who are<br />
recovering from an illness or injury.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> About $10-20/month.</p>
<h3><strong>Under Armour Combine Training Center</strong></h3>
<p><em>1010 Hull St., 410-752-0100</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> Located on Under Armour’s Tide Point<br />
 campus, the Combine Training Center (CTC) is the 11,000-square-foot<br />
brainchild of FX Studios and Under Armour. The space is very open with<br />
hardwood floors and fire-engine red walls, with windows overlooking Tide<br />
 Point’s promenade and the harbor. There are rooms for cardio, strength<br />
training, weight lifting, and various open spaces for classes and<br />
suspension training.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> The clientele is about 70 percent<br />
Under Amour employees, but the facility has been available to the public<br />
 since it opened two years ago. “Your typical Under Armour employee is<br />
pretty type A, competitive, and athletic,” says Nate Costa, trainer and<br />
owner of FX Studios. “That energy inspires everyone.” The CTC has also<br />
hosted professional athletes like Tom Brady, Brandon Jennings, and<br />
Lindsey Vonn.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Besides the TRX suspension training and a<br />
 hardcore combine program, the CTC offers barre classes, which is the<br />
core training class done at a ballet bar that is popular in bigger<br />
cities and just starting to be introduced here. “It has the flow of a<br />
yoga class, but you’re really working your muscles with various tension<br />
exercises,” says Costa.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Many of the CTC’s classes are held<br />
 outside on the promenade so members can exercise while overlooking the<br />
harbor and city skyline. Additionally, the gym has a “challenge wall,”<br />
where members can record their best times, weight amounts, and distances<br />
 to try to best other members. “This is a really good motivational<br />
tool,” says Costa. He also says that the CTC’s more than 600 members<br />
feel like a community, as most of them come from Tide Point offices<br />
(like Advertising.com and GKV) and already know each other.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Chris Sams is “probably the most<br />
creative trainer we have,” says Costa. Sams has a large breadth of<br />
expertise as he specializes in everything from marathon training to<br />
pre/post-natal exercise. With more than seven years of experience, Sams<br />
understands how to adapt exercise routines to fit any member. “Chris is<br />
constantly challenging your body,” says Costa. “He’s really good at<br />
keeping it fresh.”</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $50/month. (Under Armour employees included.)</p>
<h3><strong>Weinberg Family Center Y</strong></h3>
<p><em>900 W. 33rd St., 410-889-9622</em></p>
<p><strong>The facilities:</strong> The sprawling complex on the site of<br />
 the old Memorial Stadium incorporates a large fitness center with<br />
dozens of cardio and Nautilus machines and free weights, an indoor pool,<br />
 a full-length basketball court, rooms for classes, a sports field with<br />
stands, an early childhood learning center, a rock-climbing wall, the<br />
massive playground, and locker rooms with dry saunas.</p>
<p><strong>Who goes there:</strong> Conveniently located near lots of<br />
North Baltimore neighborhoods, the Y draws young professionals for the<br />
cardio equipment, rock wall, and adult basketball leagues; families for<br />
the child learning center, youth leagues, and playground; and retirees<br />
for its Silver Sneakers, Silver Splash, and Aqua Arthritis classes.</p>
<p><strong>What’s hot:</strong> Zumba and boot-camp classes are among<br />
the most popular, while the enormous open-to-the-public playground——<br />
which has miniature versions of Baltimore landmarks like the Bromo<br />
Seltzer Tower and the Hippodrome—— draws visitors from all over the<br />
region.</p>
<p><strong>Special features:</strong> Built on the site of Memorial<br />
Stadium, the Y pays tribute to the Baltimore Orioles and Colts greats<br />
who gained glory there. The Ring of Honor in the large gymnasium,<br />
features large banners celebrating Earl Weaver, Brooks Robinson, Lenny<br />
Moore, Art Donovan, Frank Robinson, and several others.</p>
<p><strong>Meet a trainer:</strong> Fitness director Craig Collins has a<br />
 degree in cardiac rehab and works both with elderly and rehabilitating<br />
clients, as well as runners and amateur athletes on bio-mechanics and<br />
performance enhancement.</p>
<p><strong>Rates:</strong> $49/month for adults; $68-78/month for families.</p>

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