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Students Pay To Avoid MAC

Some students looking to stay in shape prefer the spacious accomodations at Wellbridge Athletic Club, shown above, to the overcrowded facilities on campus.
Some students looking to stay in shape prefer the spacious accomodations at Wellbridge Athletic Club, shown above, to the overcrowded facilities on campus.
By Wendy D. Widman, Crimson Staff Writer

The price of fitness is rising.

Just as the University agreed to shell out $20,000 dollars per House gym to improve facilities, more and more students are agreeing to pay upward of $100 dollars a month to keep their physiques in top form.

Fed up with the crowded and tired facilities and classes of the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) and House gyms, several students have chosen to forgo their free memberships to Harvard fitness centers in favor of a pricier workout at private gyms, such as the Wellbridge Athletic Club near the Charles Hotel.

“It’s not the perfect gym,” said Fernanda W. Winthrop ’04, who has been a member of Wellbridge for over a year.

But even though Harvard students enjoy free access to the MAC, Wellbridge has managed to draw a substantial student population.

According to Wellbridge spokesperson Laura Mylan, about 20 to 30 percent of the gym’s 1,200 members are students.

Julia N. Bonnheim ’06, who became a Wellbridge member after using a one-week free trial during reading period, said she regularly sees several Harvard students during her workouts.

“I see people that I recognize. There are several graduate students and lots of people wear various Harvard clothing,” she said.

Ronny Luhur, a first-year student at the Kennedy School of Government garbed in a Harvard sweatshirt and clutching a Coop shopping bag, fit Bonnheim’s description.

“I like it here,” he said after his workout at Wellbridge, explaining that he immediately joined Wellbridge in September after a disappointing tour of the MAC, which he said was overcrowded.

The two gyms have comparable numbers of cardio equipment, with Wellbridge featuring five more treadmills for a total of 15, and two more stair climbers than the MAC’s six. But the MAC attracts far more people than Wellbridge; the MAC sees roughly 7,000 to 10,000 visits a week—as many as 1,500 per day—and serves a much larger population than Wellbridge does.

Luhur said he simply prefers the Wellbridge workout environment.

“There’s a lot of light and a lot of space here,” he said, looking around at the glass walls and large windows of the facility. “It’s clean and there are nice bathrooms, so I come here.”

Meaghan S. Cain ’06, who joined Wellbridge with Bonnheim, said she enjoys the gym’s steam room, hot tub and sauna—all offerings absent at the MAC.

Though Cain would normally run outside to stay fit, she said the cold weather and the lines at the MAC motivated her to join Wellbridge.

Sean M. Lubens ’04, who has exercised at Wellbridge for four years, said he joined for the classes in spinning, which involve stationary bike fitness sessions and are not offered at the MAC.

But he is not thrilled with his membership.

“It’s a terrible gym to be honest,” he said, “and it’s a complete waste of money.”

While Lubens said the membership is not worth it, Bonnheim pointed to the high cost as an increased incentive to stay fit.

“There were always so many reasons not to go to the MAC,” Bonnheim said. “But now I go to work out because I’m paying for it.”

Bonnheim’s increased motivation costs her $119 a month—a 10 percent student discount from the $132 general monthly fee—plus a $49 initial fee. But she said there are some perks to the cost, including a free personal training session and nice locker rooms and showers.

“I don’t want to be tied to an expensive gym for the rest of my life,” she said, “but for now I really am pleased.”

Although Wellbridge is located close to the Yard and the River Houses, it is not the only place to which frustrated students have turned for a better workout.

Other hot spots for Harvard students include the Boston Sports Club in Central Square and Bally Total Fitness and Healthworks in Porter Square.

Maura E. Boyce ’05, a Quincy House resident, has been a member of Healthworks for two years and joined because she was “tired of waiting in lines at the MAC.”

Even with recent renovations to the Quincy House gym, which Boyce said were very nice, she plans to keep her membership at Healthworks.

“I’ll probably work out in Quincy if I don’t have time to go to Porter,” she said. “But I’ll be a member of Healthworks until I graduate.”

—Staff writer Wendy D. Widman can be reached at widman@fas.harvard.edu

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