Contact

Talk With a Life Fitness Facility Specialist

Share your equipment mix, room size, opening date, and service needs. The right conversation can cover commercial cardio, strength stations, parts, financing, and floor planning without separating those decisions into different silos.

01

Commercial Planning

Facility floor plans, equipment counts, traffic assumptions, and member-experience goals.

02

Parts and Service

Questions about belts, cables, upholstery, console modules, and preventive maintenance timing.

03

Working Hours

Monday to Friday, commercial support hours by region, with urgent routing for active facility issues.

Project intake

Send a Facility Brief

Useful details include square footage, ceiling height, expected daily visits, existing equipment age, desired opening date, and whether you are planning cardio, strength, or a full-floor refresh.

A strong inquiry does not need perfect drawings. It should give the commercial team enough context to ask better questions: how many members train during the busiest hour, which equipment is currently most complained about, whether trainers need open coaching zones, how service technicians access the floor, and whether financing should be compared with a staged refresh.

Life Fitness conversations often include several stakeholders. Facility owners care about budget and member retention, trainers care about movement quality, maintenance leads care about parts and access, and procurement cares about lifecycle documentation. The form helps gather those perspectives into one starting brief.

  • Health clubs and multi-site operators
  • Hotels, corporate gyms, and universities
  • Parts, service, and lifecycle planning
  • Commercial cardio and strength equipment scope
  • Multi-site standards and room refresh timing