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Following a US$85m renovation that saw an iconic tennis club transformed
into an athletics club with a fitness-focused hotel, Chicago’s Midtown Athletic Club
has reopened and it boasts a truly impressive design
By Magali Robathan | Published in Health Club Management 2018 issue 3
This ‘urban sports resort’ offers a wide range of health and wellness amenities
Opened in 1970 by tennis enthusiast Alan Schwartz and his father Kevie Schwartz, Chicago’s Midtown Tennis Club (as it was originally called) quickly built a name within the sport, serving as the home court of Billie Jean King and the site at which Andre Agassi won his first national junior tournament.
While the club offered excellent tennis facilities, the gym remained a small add-on until 2015, when Chicago architectural and interiors practice DMAC Architecture began an ambitious transformation of the tennis club into “the largest premier health-and-fitness property in the US”.
Set across three floors, the refurbished and renamed Midtown Athletic Club – which reopened in November last year – now features 16 indoor tennis courts; studios for a range of activities including yoga, pilates, cycling and boxing; an indoor swimming pool; an outdoor swimming pool, which also serves as an ice rink during the winter; a fitness centre featuring Precor equipment; a full service spa; a 182-seat restaurant and a retail complex.
Above the health club sits a 55 room boutique hotel, occupying the building’s fourth and fifth floors.
“The hotel concept came late in the game, but it was an inspired idea,” says Dwayne MacEwen, founder of DMAC Architecture. “Differing from your typical hotel facility where a small portion of the property is dedicated to amenities, Midtown is 96 per cent amenity and only four per cent hotel. This is a complete gamechanger for both the hotel and club experience.
“The athletics club allows guests to prioritise fitness, not only within one’s own regimen or training programme but within business and leisure travel. The site becomes a reason in itself for travel to Chicago – to be a spectator or to participate in competitions and tournaments.”
He adds: “In many ways, the hotel was designed with the health-conscious and fitness-focused guest in mind. Rather than offering in-room yoga mats like many hotels do, we offer guests the best yoga studio and fitness classes in the country, as well as state-of-the-art equipment and the exciting amenities offered at the club.”
Following a US$85m renovation that saw an iconic tennis club transformed
into an athletics club with a fitness-focused hotel, Chicago’s Midtown Athletic Club
has reopened and it boasts a truly impressive design
By Magali Robathan | Published in Health Club Management 2018 issue 3
This ‘urban sports resort’ offers a wide range of health and wellness amenities
Opened in 1970 by tennis enthusiast Alan Schwartz and his father Kevie Schwartz, Chicago’s Midtown Tennis Club (as it was originally called) quickly built a name within the sport, serving as the home court of Billie Jean King and the site at which Andre Agassi won his first national junior tournament.
While the club offered excellent tennis facilities, the gym remained a small add-on until 2015, when Chicago architectural and interiors practice DMAC Architecture began an ambitious transformation of the tennis club into “the largest premier health-and-fitness property in the US”.
Set across three floors, the refurbished and renamed Midtown Athletic Club – which reopened in November last year – now features 16 indoor tennis courts; studios for a range of activities including yoga, pilates, cycling and boxing; an indoor swimming pool; an outdoor swimming pool, which also serves as an ice rink during the winter; a fitness centre featuring Precor equipment; a full service spa; a 182-seat restaurant and a retail complex.
Above the health club sits a 55 room boutique hotel, occupying the building’s fourth and fifth floors.
“The hotel concept came late in the game, but it was an inspired idea,” says Dwayne MacEwen, founder of DMAC Architecture. “Differing from your typical hotel facility where a small portion of the property is dedicated to amenities, Midtown is 96 per cent amenity and only four per cent hotel. This is a complete gamechanger for both the hotel and club experience.
“The athletics club allows guests to prioritise fitness, not only within one’s own regimen or training programme but within business and leisure travel. The site becomes a reason in itself for travel to Chicago – to be a spectator or to participate in competitions and tournaments.”
He adds: “In many ways, the hotel was designed with the health-conscious and fitness-focused guest in mind. Rather than offering in-room yoga mats like many hotels do, we offer guests the best yoga studio and fitness classes in the country, as well as state-of-the-art equipment and the exciting amenities offered at the club.”
Global Wellness Day (GWD) will mark its 15th anniversary on Saturday 13 June 2026, with the
theme: #JoyMagenta – a celebration of the healing qualities of simple gestures and activities
that spark joy.
Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider,
HUM2N, to launch a clinic at Six Senses London, at The Whiteley.
As part of its first hotel partnership, Mayrlife – the medical health resort company known for its
site in Altaussee, Austria – has launched a day clinic at the Rosewood Vienna.
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, will imminently unveil its most significant
redevelopment since its launch in 2002 to create an integrated wellness model combining
training, recovery and relaxation.
Rosewood Le Guanahani St Barth, on the northeast coast of Saint Barthélemy in the French
West Indies, is offering a programme of ocean-inspired yoga classes between 8-14 June to
celebrate Global Wellness Day (GWD).
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, in Malaysia, has revealed a schedule for Global Wellness Day
(GWD) that includes guided rainforest walks, mindful movement and guided coastal meditation
experiences.
Longevitix, a clinical platform for preventive and longevity medicine, has launched its AI-
powered intelligence system to help physicians deliver continuous, personalised longevity-
focused care at scale.
Atmantan Wellness Centre, an integrative wellness destination in Mulshi, near Pune in India, is
expanding its portfolio by adding a new centre in Hyderabad that will launch between 2028 and
2029.
A recent survey by the UK Spa Association (UKSA) into the industry’s approach to cancer care
has revealed that almost half of participating respondents (46 per cent) are unaware that
cancer is a disability and guests with a cancer diagnosis must be given