To maintain exclusivity and convenience via an attractive amenity, a select group of office buildings are choosing to install their own tenants-only fitness facilities.âšâš These now include the Empire State Building, which has been creating its own vertical campus with many amenities; the far smaller, more boutique-sized 111-115 Broadway; the tony 510 Madison Ave.; and the new International Gem Tower.
At the International Gem Tower, which has a jewel tenantsâ lobby at 50 W. 47th and a high floorsâ lobby at 55 W. 46th, there is a private, tenants-only 2,000-square-foot gym. It includes locker rooms, showers, steam rooms and bike storage. âšâšOn a tour earlier this year, Raizy Haas, senior vice president, project management and development for Extell Development, said it will also have a âquietâ room for yoga.âšâšExtell developed the 34-story, high-security mixed-use office condominium building in part for the diamond, gem and jewelry trade. The separate office âbuildingâ on the top floors, entered at 55 W. 46th St., is being sold to SL Green Realty Corp., which will take over all operations, including the gym.
David Falk, Tri-State president of Newmark Grubb Knight Frank, said that during a space search âwhen thereâs a tieâ between spaces, a gym can be the tie-breaker, âbut itâs not going to be the driver of the decision.ââšâš Richard Cohen, president of Capital Properties, however, said amenities, in general, often drive the leasing of office space.
His 111-115 Broadway, a k a Trinity Centre, a historical property near Trinity Church, is installing, among other features, a full floor of white-boarded conference rooms, a golf simulator and a new gym on a top floor.âšâšâWeâre putting in a health club on the 22nd floor for tenants only,â said Cohen. âItâs not a small little health club in a basement â it is well lit and sunny, 4,000 square feet and elaborate.â
The buildingâs leasing agent, Bradley P. Gerla, executive vice president at CBRE, says the gym is already helping attract tech and advertising tenants to the downtown building.âšâš The gym will be open by the end of the year. âšâšâTenants donât have to leave the building and can work out before work or during lunch,â said Gerla. âThatâs the beauty of it.ââšâšBoston Propertiesâ 510 Madison Ave. ups the exclusivity ante by offering only five passes per floor to its 7,000-square-foot fitness facility. The amenity is billed at $1.50 per foot, said its leasing agent, Paul Amrich, vice chairman of CBRE. Where a floor is shared by two tenants, three might go to one and two to the other, he said.
The gym was designed by developers Harry and Billy Macklowe prior to the luxury office building being sold to Boston Properties. It includes a 50-foot lap pool, marble vanities and wood-paneled locker rooms fully stocked with top-of-the-line products.âšâšCurrently, 510 Fitness is managed by Plus One Health Management. Along with the pool, it has a weight room and cardio machines, and offers personal training, yoga and Pilates.âšâš âThey implemented the highest-grade gym in an office building,â said Amrich. âThe lap pool is an extra benefit and itâs a nice architectural piece. Itâs been a real draw and has assisted with the lease up. A lot of tenants in the building are very serious about their workouts so having it, and being private, is a real benefit.â
The 35-story tower now has roughly 150 passes to the gym handed out, but has the capacity to go up to 200.âšâšâThe reason we kept it to that number is so the gym is never crowded. You will only see five or 10 people working out,â said Amrich.âšâšBroker Daniel Posy, senior managing director at Savills Studley, who represents many hedge fund clients, said, âItâs a great amenity for my clients who would otherwise put in their own gyms.â
Posey explained that getting permission from a building owner to install a gym in a tenantâs own space is a ânightmareâ and âcauses messy lease negotiations. ââšâšGyms on tenant floors can become noisy for other tenants, Posy explained, especially when employees drop weights. It also adds extra plumbing for showers. âTenants will not put in a health club because itâs too costly,â said building owner Cohen. âItâs really the job of the building to put in those amenities.ââšâšThe gigantic Empire State Building, which is creating a vertical urban campus, recently opened a health facility in its concourse thatâs fit for an 800-pound gorilla.
The 15,000-square-foot, tenants-only gym, the largest tenants-only facility in the city, is operated by Plus One.âšâš17 Life has installed its own treadmills, crosstrainers, stairclimbers and numerous bike configurations along with strength equipment. âšâšAlthough even lowly employees can join for $35 per month, there is a separate private executive fitness section with three changing cabanas.âšâš âThis is very, very high-end and very lavish,â said Tom Durels, executive vice president and director of leasing and operations for ESBâs owner, Empire State Realty Trust. âšâšâOur tenants will never wait for a treadmill or a shower. There is an abundance of showers in lavishly appointed locker rooms and a very high-quality experience for the exclusive use of our tenants,â Durels said. He called the $35-per-month fee a âbargain,â and says the company will make its money through the lease up of the building, and attracting and retaining tenants at higher rents.âšâšThe health club opened earlier this month and hours are being rejiggered as use patterns are monitored.
Other facilities include a tenants-only conference center, and on-site food options, including the new State Grill & Bar with private executive dining and private event space.âšâšâItâs all about creating a very remarkable, very unique experience housed in this architectural gem,â said Durels.
The success of the tenants-only gyms as a private amenity is giving other owners the incentive to add facilities to their own buildings. Amrich, of CBRE, will soon launch marketing for 222 E. 41st St. â which will be entirely vacant when its only tenant, law firm Jones Day, moves downtown â and will soon feature a high-end athletic club.âšâšBuilt in 2002, the 400,000-square-foot tower has high ceilings and floor-to-ceiling windows. In consultation with Amrich, the owners, Atlanta-based Columbia Property Trust, decided to fill the second floor with amenities.âšâšAmrich said in addition to the athletic club, which will be just for building tenants, it will have a high-end food service similar to a dining club for the buildingâs executives.âšâšA luxurious lounge and library- like environment will also have âcoolâ meeting areas, he said.
The Midtown building will also have rents averaging in the $70s per foot.âšâšWhile many are now available, the very first non-public office fitness center was installed by Hartz Group at 667 Madison Ave., which is known as one of the âcountry clubâ buildings for its exclusivity and amenities. Opened in 2012, itâs free for tenants and their employees.
source: https://nypost.com/2014/10/20/the-rise-of-tenants-only-gyms-in-nyc-office-buildings/


