Bristol member-owned gym launches fundraiser for venue

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Bristol Cooperative GymImage source, Paul Samuel White
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The crowdfund has so far raised £20,000

A member-owned gym for "all sexualities and body sizes" has launched a crowdfunder to revamp its new space.

Bristol Cooperative Gym is the only one of its kind in the UK and aims to fight "negative" and exclusionary gym culture.

Its founder said the space moves away from notions like "the women do the cardio, the men do the weightlifting".

Gym member Rachel Hahn said it "feels like home" but needs some financial support to make it better fit for use.

She said: "Lots of people, especially those who identify as women, transgender, non-binary do not feel welcome in regular gyms and that has stopped me going to gyms in the past.

"This one is different, it feels like home and I'm very proud of it.

"It helps to calm my mind. It's my community."

Image source, Rachel Hahn
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Rachel (right) said she hopes more people join after it has been renovated

The gym had been running from All Hallows Hall in Easton since 2016 but has now moved to an office block in Brislington after it was offered a permanent space.

The members plan to renovate it and make it more accessible for people who have physical challenges and those who are neurodiverse.

Founder Guy Lochhead said he hoped it inspired others in the UK to start up their own gym co-op.

He said: "I wanted to create a space that moved away from gendered notions.

"There are these third places that aren't home or work.

"The pub used to be a classic example, but I think the gym, in the way that we do it, could potentially take on that role."

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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Bristol Co-op members have a say and stake in every aspect of running the gym

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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The permanent building the gym now operates out of still looks like an office and needs renovating

Gym member Lotte Kammenga said when she was younger she felt excluded from fitness but now loves weightlifting at the co-op.

She said: "Gyms typically have a narrow target audience. I think it's a gender, sexuality, body size and age thing.

"But everyone here is in it together."

Mr Lochhead has released a podcast alongside the fundraising campaign called The Good Gym Guide.

Social science lecturer doctor Conor Hefferman, from Ulster University, features in it.

He said co-op gyms came to the UK in the 1920s but died off "in a major way".

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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Mr Lochhead said he hopes the revival of the co-op gym inspires others to make their own

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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Lotte said the co-op is a positive space that makes her feel welcomed in a way that other gyms do not do

He said Bristol Co-op Gym was "entirely unique" and provides a "radical reimagining of what a gym can, and should be".

"I've likened it to a punk gym. It is counter cultural in the very conservative fitness space."

The crowdfund has so far raised £20,000 with an aim to reach £27,000 by 25 April.

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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Members of the gym want to make the space more accessible for people with disabilities

Image source, Paul Samuel White
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The new space and equipment will be better suited for people who are autistic or who have physical disabilities

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