Latest
issue
GET HCM
magazine
Sign up for the FREE digital edition of HCM magazine and also get the HCM ezine and breaking news email alerts.
Not right now, thanksclose this window I've already subscribed!
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Follow Health Club Management on Twitter Like Health Club Management on Facebook Join the discussion with Health Club Management on LinkedIn
FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Interview: Tom Edwards & Jon Williams

Kate Cracknell talks to the entrepreneurs bringing the new Forest House health club brand to market

Published in Health Club Management 2023 issue 6
COO Tom Edwards (l) and MD Jon Williams (r) of The Really Fine Leisure Company / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
COO Tom Edwards (l) and MD Jon Williams (r) of The Really Fine Leisure Company / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
We want Forest House to be the place that ticks all the boxes: that isn’t just another health and fitness club

Tell us about the Forest House concept
For the last 10 years, we’ve had a number of brands running alongside each other: a premium health club experience at The Marlow Club, a premium yoga and pilates offering called PilaYoga and our functional fitness studios, The Fitness Experts.

With the launch of our new £3m Forest House club in Watford (June 2023), we’re bringing everything together in what we jokingly call our ‘greatest hits compilation’. We’ve taken the best of what we’ve done over the years and applied all our learnings to create something genuinely new and different in the market.

Funnily enough it’s a site we’ve had on our radar for over 10 years, as it was going to be our first Fitness Experts location. It’s part of the West Herts Sports Club, where –alongside the 18,000sq ft building we’ve taken on a 125-year lease – are 12 tennis courts, cricket, football and five-a-side football. Our members have access to all these facilities.

How did you approach the development?
We completely gutted the building – all we left were the walls – and started again from scratch, working with Jeffrey Jordan Architects and designer Sarah Mannerings to create a space that simultaneously makes you feel comfortable and has a wow factor. The feeling we’ve gone for is more Soho House members’ club than health club, with distinct spaces where you can spend time – the restaurant, for example, which features lots of wood and hanging plants.

The notion of ‘Forest’ is drawn from the environment – the club itself is surrounded by fields – and we’re making it as sustainable as possible, with solar panels on the roof coming in 2024, planting all around the club, everything sourced locally and five trees planted for every member who joins.

The ‘House’ part of the name is about making people feel at home in a community where they feel safe, with service levels that are out of this world. It doesn’t feel like a club, it’s a second home, with a maximum adult-only capacity of 2,000 members. Even people who’ve never found a club that ‘fitted’ them before will feel comfortable at Forest House.

What’s on offer?
There’s a strong emphasis on group exercise, with a yoga-Pilates-hot yoga studio (Flow), a reformer studio (Reform), a functional fitness studio and an indoor cycling studio (Ride). There’s also an open gym floor, a lounge, multiple therapy rooms and two squash courts.

We’re not ruling out a spa in the future – we have the space – but with energy prices as they are, we’re pleased we decided not to launch with this.

Our big USP is the way that we’ve packaged everything around time, energy and space.

Time is an interesting one, because it isn’t just about the usual issue of being stressed and not having enough time. It’s also about catering for those who might be retired and have plenty of time, or who work flexibly. We want to cater for all different needs and mindsets.

One of the ways we do this is by offering all our classes in four lengths: 20, 40, 60 and 80 minutes. Across 100+ weekly classes, our timetable is designed to accommodate different lengths at appropriate times of day. There’s also an added option of virtual classes when studio spaces aren’t in use for live classes.

Whether members want to pop in and do a 20-minute meditation, stack a couple of different classes or take their time in a 60-minute workout, it’s all here for them.

Energy is about understanding that people are different – some of them might opt for mindfulness and relaxation classes, while others might opt for HIIT or bootcamp – and that the same person will usually have different energies at different times.

Across our timetable, every 20-, 40- and 60-minute class is labelled Revive, Thrive or Strive: gentle and restorative, moderate intensity or more challenging.

We don’t have complicated class names: you pick your studio – Flow, Reform, Ride or Functional – and then decide whether within that concept, you want a Revive, Thrive or Strive class.

Every 80-minute class is labelled ‘Meta’, which means you get a bit of every energy level – Revive, Thrive and Strive – within the 80 minutes.

The final piece of the puzzle is Space and this is about recognising different mindsets: some will come for quiet, others to seek out a community.

At Forest House, if you want to put your headphones on to work out, then use the Headspace app and quietly lie on the yoga studio floor on your own, we respect that. If you want to get involved in the social side, doing workshops and seminars and so on, we have plenty on offer.

The lounge is a hub that reflects the three – time, energy and space. If you’re short on time, you can pre-order your protein shake, do a 20-minute class and you’re in and out of the building in 21 minutes. Alternatively you can come in, do a class with a friend, sit and have a coffee afterwards and take your time. If you want to work from the club, that’s fine too: we have work-focused spaces.

How holistic is the offering?
Even within our studios, there’s a big focus on mindfulness, breathwork, meditation and so on. People need this now more than ever.

Complementing this, our therapy rooms not only offer physiotherapy, nutrition consultations, beauty treatments and so on, but also mental health support. If you’re feeling low, we want you to be able to seek advice in a place where you feel comfortable. If your energy levels are down, we want you to know you can come to us and walk out of the door afterwards feeling revived.

What are your ambitions for Forest House?
We aim to be at capacity within 13 months of opening – ie by July 2024. That feels very achievable: membership costs £100 a month on a 12-month contract or £125 on a three-month contract, and within a few weeks of a very light-touch pre-sale we’d had 200 members pay a deposit and choose their membership category.

Beyond that, this is definitely a concept we’ll want to roll out, not only in the UK but potentially internationally. It will all be down to finding the right locations – it needs green space – and we’re not talking hundreds of clubs. Maybe 10 in total. But it’s definitely a concept we can grow and we’re already looking at a second UK site.

We want Forest House to bring something unique and special to the community. Health and fitness is our passion and we want this to be a club that sits at the forefront of our evolving sector.

Give us the background on your brands
Our flagship property, the Marlow Club, is a one-off – you’d need £10m to build another like it and that isn’t realistic for an independent operation such as ours, so in 2011, we decided to test a new model: a smaller, boutique-style club offering group functional training classes.

We created a new brand – The Fitness Experts – and launched our first site in Basingstoke.

The concept came from a desire to get results for members without anyone having to pay extra for personal training. All classes are run by PTs and are focused on delivering results. Whatever people’s initial fitness level, we design classes so everyone can do them.

We tested this model over three years, fine-tuning it to optimise finances, while still achieving results for members and settled on a maximum of 20 people in each class.

How’s it going?
It works well. We run 10-12 classes a day and the workout is different every day: it might be strength, CV, core, individual or team challenges. The key is making it fun and effective, so people come back.

We then rolled the concept out, opening a 4,500sq ft club in High Wycombe in 2015 and a 5,000sq ft club in Harwell Campus near Didcot in 2019. We also outgrew our 3,500sq ft location in Basingstoke and moved to a 5,000sq ft site, with the launch scheduled for 23 March 2020. That turned out to be pretty bad timing! We didn’t even have a chance to move members across before lockdown hit.

The business is performing well again now and we’re thankful to the large number of members who showed their support by paying membership fees throughout the lockdowns.

You also launched PilaYoga Studios
Located on-site at The Marlow Club, we created PilaYoga because Marlow Club classes were full to capacity, with waiting lists particularly long for holistic classes.

PilaYoga Studios opened in 2019 and offers a reformer pilates studio, a hot yoga studio and a studio for normal yoga, mat Pilates and barre. In fact, it originally only offered more standard yoga classes, but after lockdown – when a lot of people had happily done yoga in their living rooms – we realised we needed to provide a more compelling reason to return to the studio. That’s when we added hot yoga and it’s made all the difference. The business is booming.

What are the fees?
PilaYoga is sold as a separate offering from the Marlow Club, with unlimited membership priced at £200 a month for reformer Pilates and £125 a month for yoga, mat Pilates, barre and hot yoga.

Marlow Club members can add discounted bolt-ons and class packs – £40 a month for four yoga sessions, for example and £75 for four reformer Pilates classes a month.

It’s pretty much full to capacity: 29 hot yoga classes a week, 33 reformer Pilates classes – with more being added all the time – as well as barre, standard yoga and Pilates classes. It’s doing really well.

Will you build more?
We wouldn’t roll this model out to standalone sites. We have complete confidence in PilaYoga as a brand, but at Marlow we have the benefit of an existing building that we’ve extended and own the freehold on: there’s no additional rent to pay. Utility costs are shared. Our front of house staff look after the whole thing. Our operating costs are low. Meanwhile, nationally, we’re seeing some standalone yoga and pilates studios struggling. As much as we’d love to roll out PilaYoga, that isn’t realistic.

Has the pandemic impacted the business?
COVID hit us hard, but just as with The Fitness Experts, Marlow Club members were incredibly supportive: 58 per cent paid membership throughout lockdown without asking for anything in return. They just wanted their club to survive.

And the reality is, if they hadn’t done that, we wouldn’t be here today. We’d invested £3.5m in the couple of years leading up to Q1 2019: we bought land over the road and built a multi-storey car park for our members, we purchased the freehold, we extended the club to 30,000sq ft to include PilaYoga and a Crossfit-style training box, we refurbished the entire club, and we’d been trading so well we’d been able to borrow around 60 per cent of that from the bank.

Our members knew that, they bought into what we were doing for the community and they supported us when we needed it.

What did you do for them?
Of course, although they didn’t ask for anything in return, we were always going to support them through the lockdowns and as soon as the first media leaks suggested there might be an issue brewing, we started to prepare.

We were already working with a software company to develop bespoke software that makes membership more engaging and rewarding, with elements of gamification and a highly member-centric app. Working with this company, we had online classes, one-to-one nutrition consultations and so on ready to go even before we had to close our doors.

All this was provided to members free of charge. We also lent out all our equipment, other than our treadmills and heavy fixed resistance machines, and created on-demand workouts and classes based around the kit we knew our members had at home.

How has the recovery been to date?
We’re back to capacity, with 2,800 members at The Marlow Club, while yield per member is 17 per cent higher than before the pandemic.

We’ve raised membership prices to £110 a month, but we continue to add value: we’ll do more work in the gym this year, as well as refurbishing the pool.

It’s also the case that members now use the club differently. They meet here, work here and eat here. They use the club as a social hub instead of going out. The 75 covers in our restaurant are always booked. Personal training is full. Secondary spend is high across the board, so it’s changed our business in many positive ways.

Background briefing

The first time HCM talked to the Really Fine Leisure Company was 2010, at which point our interviewees were owner Steve Lewis and Jon Williams, then GM at The Marlow Club.

Fast-forward to 2023 and Lewis – now group exec chair – has stepped back from the day-to-day, handing the reins to Williams as group MD.

Williams is supported by group operations director, Tom Edwards, who has progressed through the company’s ranks for more than 17 years, as everything from bar worker to lifeguard, gym instructor, PT and nutritionist.

The portfolio has evolved, too. The Marlow Club still sits at the heart of the business, and the Really Fine Leisure Company continues to operate The Thames Club on a management contract. But the two other sites that were active in 2010 – Mill Hill and Windsor – were taken back by their respective local authorities.

The company has launched three new brands since – The Fitness Experts (2011), PilaYoga (2019) and Forest House (2023), with plans to roll out the latter globally.

Yoga, Pilates and hot-yoga join indoor cycling as part of the group exercise focus / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Yoga, Pilates and hot-yoga join indoor cycling as part of the group exercise focus / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
/ PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The gym floor, with interior design by Sarah Mannerings / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The gym floor, with interior design by Sarah Mannerings / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The restaurant at Forest House features lots of wood to create a welcoming vibe / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The restaurant at Forest House features lots of wood to create a welcoming vibe / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Members can work out, socialise, eat and work at the club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Members can work out, socialise, eat and work at the club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
/ PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Class lengths vary to match members’ energy levels / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Class lengths vary to match members’ energy levels / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Forest House was designed as a ‘compilation of greatest hits’ say Edwards and Williams / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Forest House was designed as a ‘compilation of greatest hits’ say Edwards and Williams / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Marlow Club classes are full to capacity with waiting lists / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Marlow Club classes are full to capacity with waiting lists / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
PilaYoga is based at The Marlow Club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
PilaYoga is based at The Marlow Club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/2023/277235_286588.jpg
Kate Cracknell talks to the serial fitness entrepreneurs behind the new Forest House concept and other innovative health and fitness brands
HCM magazine
Egym has announced deals designed to position it for growth acceleration, as Kath Hudson reports
HCM magazine
As health club operators move to incorporate recovery into their offerings to meet growing consumer demand, Steph Eaves takes a look at what cryotherapy and ice bathing can add to the equation
HCM magazine
New research has found BMI to be a highly inaccurate measure of childhood obesity, leading current thinking and policy based on it into question
HCM magazine
Now mental health is the number one reason for people to join a health club, do fitness professionals need a grounding in counselling to offer a more holistic service? Kath Hudson asks the experts
HCM magazine
Industry suppliers are responding to the exponential increase in consumer demand for strength training with a raft of new and innovative launches and concepts, as Steph Eaves reports
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Recent work includes a gym refurb for a number of Everyone Active sites and a full range of merchandise for the Oxford vs Cambridge Boat Race
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Operators, prepare to revolutionise the way members connect with personal trainers in your club, with the ground-breaking Brawn platform.
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Nuffield Health has worked with ServiceSport UK for more than ten years, ensuring the equipment in its clubs is commercially optimised
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Epassi, a provider of workplace wellness benefits, is creating a fitter and more productive workforce, one membership at a time 
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Francesca Cooper-Boden says health assessment services can boost health club retention
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
The New Keiser M3i Studio Bike brings ride data to life to engage and delight members
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
University of Sheffield Sport has opened the doors of its flagship Goodwin Sports Centre following a major refurbishment
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
The partnership between PureGym and Belfast-based supplier BLK BOX is transforming the gym floor
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
GymNation is pioneering the future of fitness with software specialist Perfect Gym providing a scalable tech platform to power and sustain its growth
HCM promotional features
Latest News
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it ...
Latest News
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain ...
Latest News
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
Latest News
Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more ...
Latest News
Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to ...
Latest News
With the launch of its 49th John Reed, RSG Group is looking for more opportunities ...
Latest News
PureGym saw revenues rise by 15 per cent in 2023, with the company announcing plans ...
Latest News
Following three disrupted lockdown years, the European fitness market bounced back in 2023, according to ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Sibec EMEA to blend fitness with luxury at Fairmont Monte Carlo
Experience the pinnacle of fitness and luxury at the premier industry event, Sibec EMEA, set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Fairmont Monte Carlo this Autumn.
Company profiles
Company profile: PSLT Ltd
PSLT Fitness Solutions manufacture, remanufacture and buy back commercial gym equipment. We supply and maintain ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Keiser UK LTD
For more than four decades, Keiser has influenced the training of athletes, fitness enthusiasts and ...
Supplier Showcase
Supplier showcase - Jon Williams
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: ‘FAB’ freebies for Barnet carers!
Being a carer – whether that’s looking after a young person, a senior citizen or someone with a long-term illness or disability – can be rewarding but stressful at times. These responsibilities may also limit the carer’s ability to find paid employment.
Featured press releases
FIBO press release: FIBO 2024: Billion-euro fitness market continues to grow
11 to 14 April saw the fitness industry impressively demonstrate just how innovative it is in fulfilling its responsibility for a healthy society at FIBO in Cologne. Over 1,000 exhibitors and partners generated boundless enthusiasm among 129,668 visitors from 114 countries.
Directory
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
salt therapy products
Saltability: salt therapy products
Lockers
Fitlockers: Lockers
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Property & Tenders
Loughton, IG10
Knight Frank
Property & Tenders
Grantham, Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
11-13 Jun 2024
Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore, Singapore
Diary dates
12-13 Jun 2024
ExCeL London, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates

features

Interview: Tom Edwards & Jon Williams

Kate Cracknell talks to the entrepreneurs bringing the new Forest House health club brand to market

Published in Health Club Management 2023 issue 6
COO Tom Edwards (l) and MD Jon Williams (r) of The Really Fine Leisure Company / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
COO Tom Edwards (l) and MD Jon Williams (r) of The Really Fine Leisure Company / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
We want Forest House to be the place that ticks all the boxes: that isn’t just another health and fitness club

Tell us about the Forest House concept
For the last 10 years, we’ve had a number of brands running alongside each other: a premium health club experience at The Marlow Club, a premium yoga and pilates offering called PilaYoga and our functional fitness studios, The Fitness Experts.

With the launch of our new £3m Forest House club in Watford (June 2023), we’re bringing everything together in what we jokingly call our ‘greatest hits compilation’. We’ve taken the best of what we’ve done over the years and applied all our learnings to create something genuinely new and different in the market.

Funnily enough it’s a site we’ve had on our radar for over 10 years, as it was going to be our first Fitness Experts location. It’s part of the West Herts Sports Club, where –alongside the 18,000sq ft building we’ve taken on a 125-year lease – are 12 tennis courts, cricket, football and five-a-side football. Our members have access to all these facilities.

How did you approach the development?
We completely gutted the building – all we left were the walls – and started again from scratch, working with Jeffrey Jordan Architects and designer Sarah Mannerings to create a space that simultaneously makes you feel comfortable and has a wow factor. The feeling we’ve gone for is more Soho House members’ club than health club, with distinct spaces where you can spend time – the restaurant, for example, which features lots of wood and hanging plants.

The notion of ‘Forest’ is drawn from the environment – the club itself is surrounded by fields – and we’re making it as sustainable as possible, with solar panels on the roof coming in 2024, planting all around the club, everything sourced locally and five trees planted for every member who joins.

The ‘House’ part of the name is about making people feel at home in a community where they feel safe, with service levels that are out of this world. It doesn’t feel like a club, it’s a second home, with a maximum adult-only capacity of 2,000 members. Even people who’ve never found a club that ‘fitted’ them before will feel comfortable at Forest House.

What’s on offer?
There’s a strong emphasis on group exercise, with a yoga-Pilates-hot yoga studio (Flow), a reformer studio (Reform), a functional fitness studio and an indoor cycling studio (Ride). There’s also an open gym floor, a lounge, multiple therapy rooms and two squash courts.

We’re not ruling out a spa in the future – we have the space – but with energy prices as they are, we’re pleased we decided not to launch with this.

Our big USP is the way that we’ve packaged everything around time, energy and space.

Time is an interesting one, because it isn’t just about the usual issue of being stressed and not having enough time. It’s also about catering for those who might be retired and have plenty of time, or who work flexibly. We want to cater for all different needs and mindsets.

One of the ways we do this is by offering all our classes in four lengths: 20, 40, 60 and 80 minutes. Across 100+ weekly classes, our timetable is designed to accommodate different lengths at appropriate times of day. There’s also an added option of virtual classes when studio spaces aren’t in use for live classes.

Whether members want to pop in and do a 20-minute meditation, stack a couple of different classes or take their time in a 60-minute workout, it’s all here for them.

Energy is about understanding that people are different – some of them might opt for mindfulness and relaxation classes, while others might opt for HIIT or bootcamp – and that the same person will usually have different energies at different times.

Across our timetable, every 20-, 40- and 60-minute class is labelled Revive, Thrive or Strive: gentle and restorative, moderate intensity or more challenging.

We don’t have complicated class names: you pick your studio – Flow, Reform, Ride or Functional – and then decide whether within that concept, you want a Revive, Thrive or Strive class.

Every 80-minute class is labelled ‘Meta’, which means you get a bit of every energy level – Revive, Thrive and Strive – within the 80 minutes.

The final piece of the puzzle is Space and this is about recognising different mindsets: some will come for quiet, others to seek out a community.

At Forest House, if you want to put your headphones on to work out, then use the Headspace app and quietly lie on the yoga studio floor on your own, we respect that. If you want to get involved in the social side, doing workshops and seminars and so on, we have plenty on offer.

The lounge is a hub that reflects the three – time, energy and space. If you’re short on time, you can pre-order your protein shake, do a 20-minute class and you’re in and out of the building in 21 minutes. Alternatively you can come in, do a class with a friend, sit and have a coffee afterwards and take your time. If you want to work from the club, that’s fine too: we have work-focused spaces.

How holistic is the offering?
Even within our studios, there’s a big focus on mindfulness, breathwork, meditation and so on. People need this now more than ever.

Complementing this, our therapy rooms not only offer physiotherapy, nutrition consultations, beauty treatments and so on, but also mental health support. If you’re feeling low, we want you to be able to seek advice in a place where you feel comfortable. If your energy levels are down, we want you to know you can come to us and walk out of the door afterwards feeling revived.

What are your ambitions for Forest House?
We aim to be at capacity within 13 months of opening – ie by July 2024. That feels very achievable: membership costs £100 a month on a 12-month contract or £125 on a three-month contract, and within a few weeks of a very light-touch pre-sale we’d had 200 members pay a deposit and choose their membership category.

Beyond that, this is definitely a concept we’ll want to roll out, not only in the UK but potentially internationally. It will all be down to finding the right locations – it needs green space – and we’re not talking hundreds of clubs. Maybe 10 in total. But it’s definitely a concept we can grow and we’re already looking at a second UK site.

We want Forest House to bring something unique and special to the community. Health and fitness is our passion and we want this to be a club that sits at the forefront of our evolving sector.

Give us the background on your brands
Our flagship property, the Marlow Club, is a one-off – you’d need £10m to build another like it and that isn’t realistic for an independent operation such as ours, so in 2011, we decided to test a new model: a smaller, boutique-style club offering group functional training classes.

We created a new brand – The Fitness Experts – and launched our first site in Basingstoke.

The concept came from a desire to get results for members without anyone having to pay extra for personal training. All classes are run by PTs and are focused on delivering results. Whatever people’s initial fitness level, we design classes so everyone can do them.

We tested this model over three years, fine-tuning it to optimise finances, while still achieving results for members and settled on a maximum of 20 people in each class.

How’s it going?
It works well. We run 10-12 classes a day and the workout is different every day: it might be strength, CV, core, individual or team challenges. The key is making it fun and effective, so people come back.

We then rolled the concept out, opening a 4,500sq ft club in High Wycombe in 2015 and a 5,000sq ft club in Harwell Campus near Didcot in 2019. We also outgrew our 3,500sq ft location in Basingstoke and moved to a 5,000sq ft site, with the launch scheduled for 23 March 2020. That turned out to be pretty bad timing! We didn’t even have a chance to move members across before lockdown hit.

The business is performing well again now and we’re thankful to the large number of members who showed their support by paying membership fees throughout the lockdowns.

You also launched PilaYoga Studios
Located on-site at The Marlow Club, we created PilaYoga because Marlow Club classes were full to capacity, with waiting lists particularly long for holistic classes.

PilaYoga Studios opened in 2019 and offers a reformer pilates studio, a hot yoga studio and a studio for normal yoga, mat Pilates and barre. In fact, it originally only offered more standard yoga classes, but after lockdown – when a lot of people had happily done yoga in their living rooms – we realised we needed to provide a more compelling reason to return to the studio. That’s when we added hot yoga and it’s made all the difference. The business is booming.

What are the fees?
PilaYoga is sold as a separate offering from the Marlow Club, with unlimited membership priced at £200 a month for reformer Pilates and £125 a month for yoga, mat Pilates, barre and hot yoga.

Marlow Club members can add discounted bolt-ons and class packs – £40 a month for four yoga sessions, for example and £75 for four reformer Pilates classes a month.

It’s pretty much full to capacity: 29 hot yoga classes a week, 33 reformer Pilates classes – with more being added all the time – as well as barre, standard yoga and Pilates classes. It’s doing really well.

Will you build more?
We wouldn’t roll this model out to standalone sites. We have complete confidence in PilaYoga as a brand, but at Marlow we have the benefit of an existing building that we’ve extended and own the freehold on: there’s no additional rent to pay. Utility costs are shared. Our front of house staff look after the whole thing. Our operating costs are low. Meanwhile, nationally, we’re seeing some standalone yoga and pilates studios struggling. As much as we’d love to roll out PilaYoga, that isn’t realistic.

Has the pandemic impacted the business?
COVID hit us hard, but just as with The Fitness Experts, Marlow Club members were incredibly supportive: 58 per cent paid membership throughout lockdown without asking for anything in return. They just wanted their club to survive.

And the reality is, if they hadn’t done that, we wouldn’t be here today. We’d invested £3.5m in the couple of years leading up to Q1 2019: we bought land over the road and built a multi-storey car park for our members, we purchased the freehold, we extended the club to 30,000sq ft to include PilaYoga and a Crossfit-style training box, we refurbished the entire club, and we’d been trading so well we’d been able to borrow around 60 per cent of that from the bank.

Our members knew that, they bought into what we were doing for the community and they supported us when we needed it.

What did you do for them?
Of course, although they didn’t ask for anything in return, we were always going to support them through the lockdowns and as soon as the first media leaks suggested there might be an issue brewing, we started to prepare.

We were already working with a software company to develop bespoke software that makes membership more engaging and rewarding, with elements of gamification and a highly member-centric app. Working with this company, we had online classes, one-to-one nutrition consultations and so on ready to go even before we had to close our doors.

All this was provided to members free of charge. We also lent out all our equipment, other than our treadmills and heavy fixed resistance machines, and created on-demand workouts and classes based around the kit we knew our members had at home.

How has the recovery been to date?
We’re back to capacity, with 2,800 members at The Marlow Club, while yield per member is 17 per cent higher than before the pandemic.

We’ve raised membership prices to £110 a month, but we continue to add value: we’ll do more work in the gym this year, as well as refurbishing the pool.

It’s also the case that members now use the club differently. They meet here, work here and eat here. They use the club as a social hub instead of going out. The 75 covers in our restaurant are always booked. Personal training is full. Secondary spend is high across the board, so it’s changed our business in many positive ways.

Background briefing

The first time HCM talked to the Really Fine Leisure Company was 2010, at which point our interviewees were owner Steve Lewis and Jon Williams, then GM at The Marlow Club.

Fast-forward to 2023 and Lewis – now group exec chair – has stepped back from the day-to-day, handing the reins to Williams as group MD.

Williams is supported by group operations director, Tom Edwards, who has progressed through the company’s ranks for more than 17 years, as everything from bar worker to lifeguard, gym instructor, PT and nutritionist.

The portfolio has evolved, too. The Marlow Club still sits at the heart of the business, and the Really Fine Leisure Company continues to operate The Thames Club on a management contract. But the two other sites that were active in 2010 – Mill Hill and Windsor – were taken back by their respective local authorities.

The company has launched three new brands since – The Fitness Experts (2011), PilaYoga (2019) and Forest House (2023), with plans to roll out the latter globally.

Yoga, Pilates and hot-yoga join indoor cycling as part of the group exercise focus / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Yoga, Pilates and hot-yoga join indoor cycling as part of the group exercise focus / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
/ PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The gym floor, with interior design by Sarah Mannerings / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The gym floor, with interior design by Sarah Mannerings / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The restaurant at Forest House features lots of wood to create a welcoming vibe / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The restaurant at Forest House features lots of wood to create a welcoming vibe / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Members can work out, socialise, eat and work at the club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Members can work out, socialise, eat and work at the club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
/ PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Class lengths vary to match members’ energy levels / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Class lengths vary to match members’ energy levels / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Forest House was designed as a ‘compilation of greatest hits’ say Edwards and Williams / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Forest House was designed as a ‘compilation of greatest hits’ say Edwards and Williams / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Marlow Club classes are full to capacity with waiting lists / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
Marlow Club classes are full to capacity with waiting lists / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
PilaYoga is based at The Marlow Club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
PilaYoga is based at The Marlow Club / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
The Fitness Experts. All classes are delivered by trained PTs / PHOTO: SOUTHWORKS CREATIVE
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/2023/277235_286588.jpg
Kate Cracknell talks to the serial fitness entrepreneurs behind the new Forest House concept and other innovative health and fitness brands
Latest News
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it ...
Latest News
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain ...
Latest News
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
Latest News
Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more ...
Latest News
Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to ...
Latest News
With the launch of its 49th John Reed, RSG Group is looking for more opportunities ...
Latest News
PureGym saw revenues rise by 15 per cent in 2023, with the company announcing plans ...
Latest News
Following three disrupted lockdown years, the European fitness market bounced back in 2023, according to ...
Latest News
Charitable trust, Mytime Active, has removed all single-use plastic overshoes from its swimming pools and ...
Latest News
Community Leisure UK is helping the drive to Net Zero with the launch of a ...
Latest News
Operator Circadian Trust has launched a five-year growth drive designed to support health and wellbeing ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Sibec EMEA to blend fitness with luxury at Fairmont Monte Carlo
Experience the pinnacle of fitness and luxury at the premier industry event, Sibec EMEA, set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Fairmont Monte Carlo this Autumn.
Company profiles
Company profile: PSLT Ltd
PSLT Fitness Solutions manufacture, remanufacture and buy back commercial gym equipment. We supply and maintain ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Keiser UK LTD
For more than four decades, Keiser has influenced the training of athletes, fitness enthusiasts and ...
Supplier Showcase
Supplier showcase - Jon Williams
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: ‘FAB’ freebies for Barnet carers!
Being a carer – whether that’s looking after a young person, a senior citizen or someone with a long-term illness or disability – can be rewarding but stressful at times. These responsibilities may also limit the carer’s ability to find paid employment.
Featured press releases
FIBO press release: FIBO 2024: Billion-euro fitness market continues to grow
11 to 14 April saw the fitness industry impressively demonstrate just how innovative it is in fulfilling its responsibility for a healthy society at FIBO in Cologne. Over 1,000 exhibitors and partners generated boundless enthusiasm among 129,668 visitors from 114 countries.
Directory
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
salt therapy products
Saltability: salt therapy products
Lockers
Fitlockers: Lockers
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Property & Tenders
Loughton, IG10
Knight Frank
Property & Tenders
Grantham, Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
11-13 Jun 2024
Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore, Singapore
Diary dates
12-13 Jun 2024
ExCeL London, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates
Search news, features & products:
Find a supplier:
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Partner sites