FORMA, Calisthenics All – in – One

3- D Fitness Gym Design has taken fine steps toward reshaping the world of fitness by introducing FORMA, a new line of wooden gym equipment designed by Christof Prus, the company’s creative director. From its inception, the destiny of FORMA was to become an ultimate home gym choice as well as a robust addition to any commercial facility.

FORMA is a user-friendly and increadibly space saving option. Christof’s motto “every square inch is precious” was one of his first design principles. His second goal was to create something highly versatile, where one unit would allow for thousands different exercises/movements while offering diversified difficulty levels, so his equipment can thrive in hands of professional athletes, average fitness enthusiasts of all ages and, if necessary, become a tool for physical therapy.

FORMA Totus features stall bars, adjustable height pull up bar, gymnastic rings, bench and dual column of adjustable height rubber bands. It operates in 40 square feet and stores in 2 square feet footprint. The five puzzles of totus can be used separately, or in cooperation with one another. For example, gymnastic rings and bench can be used together and serve one movement option. The bottom line is, that when all five elements are scrambled, there truly are thousands of exercise to practice.

The concept of a Single FORMA Strip is Christof’s take on how home gyms, or fitness studios should look and function. The training on a single strip is confined to a 10 feet wide and 30 feet long rectangle. This 300 square feet of space is an example of fusion of Design For Movement (DFM) and FORMA equipment. The rusult is ridiculous. Single FORMA strip is capable of training all five major components of physical fitness: muscular strength, muscular endurance, cardiovascular endurance, flexibility, and lean athletic body type. FORMA Gym – Where The Equipment, Design And Training All Work Together.

FORMA wooden fitness equipment can be the envy of any interior. Its timeless Bauhaus design blends seamlessly with any type of surrounding and can be appreciated by generations. FORMA is built to last for decades. It has passed test of durability in the tough envinments of commercial gyms. Cleaning and maintenance is simple and inexpensive.

At the present time FORMA equipment is sold online at www.thegymdesign.com  FORMA – elegant strength.

Five Tips to Optimize Your Home Gym

Five Tips to Optimize Your Home Gym

Invest in your home gym! Increase your home value! Doing so, set the tone in your commitment to a healthy lifestyle.

You first must know your potentials, so measure your gym carefully and set your preferences, such as cardio machines vs. open functional movement space, or free weights vs. calisthenics equipment. Once you make up your mind about your equipment make sure you envision using it in your gym. You must be certain that you will be able to perform your routines with no limitation in movement and range of motion. Create your layout using carpenter’s old saying “measure twice, cut once”.

Less can be more

No doubt you like cardio equipment with a good LED display and necessary controls. But, this doesn’t mean you have to buy the costliest variant on the market. A lot of features in expensive cardio machines are unnecessary. Using them is most necessary.

Be imaginative

Instead of buying multiple machines, get accessories such as rubber bands, foam roller, plyometrics steps, yoga blocks, etc. For more inexpensive equipment endorsed by me email christof@thegymdesign.com. Remember you will have more diversity of if you have variety of smaller fitness accessories. Meanwhile, the knee extension machine, for example, takes up 30 square feet and does one muscle group. Stretch your options!

Please don’t ignore your gym’s appearance

A dull and uninspiring design is discouraging and you will not want to use it. Attractively lit, painted and decorated gym motivates and inspires. Images of your favorite athletes will give you more energy. Frame your pictures, don’t cut corners and set the positive tone!

Floor forever

Flooring is one of the important elements of a gym. Make sure the floor is easy to clean and maintain. Carpets are unacceptable. They are impossible to clean. Germs and dirt stay in them forever and they get damaged.

My Design for Movement (DFM) is where Design, Equipment and Exercise All Work Together.

For help contact christof@thegymdesign.com and visit www.thegymdesign.com

Making Your Home Gym a Home Run

Making Your Home Gym a Home Run

It is often challenging to stick to your workout routine. In the prior blogs I argued in favor of home gyms and their tremendous contribution to our fitness results. Besides having a well designed/equipped home gym, I want to suggest other tips to stay motivated,  exercise regularly and take full advantage of your home gym.

Your goals should be realistic

Setting goals is necessary even if you are doing a workout at your home. Avoid setting goals that are unrealistic. To learn a new skill or conquer desirable strength/endurance/power/flexibility level takes progression. You may want to ask a professional trainer to help you design a program that is safe and realistic. Everybody is different and there are many and equally reasonable paths to meet our expectations. Find your personal path!

Measure your results

From tracking your weight to analyzing the number of repetitions, there are several things to measure your results. Personally, I’m my own device, tracker, etc. I’m also aware that some people love to use fitness apps. Here are a few of them:

  • Fitness22 Running Distance Tracker
  • MyFitnessPal
  • Google Fit
  • FitNotes
  • Jefit Workout Tracker

Have a partner

When you don’t feel like doing exercise on some days, your workout buddy can be your back-up. Make sure you choose someone who has that magical power over you. Someone, who can encourage and motivate.

Learn more about fitness and exercises

With countless articles and videos on health and fitness, staying updated has now become easier. Make sure you are gaining this knowledge from reliable portals and YouTube channels.

Remember, a good home gym design is an asset. If that’s what you want to add to your fitness experience click this link: http://thegymdesign.com/. We’ll show you how to design and furnish your ideal home gym.

Home Gym – More Than Just Equipment

Home GYM – More Than Just Equipment

February 26, 2019

There are two kinds of people;  one who enjoy working out in a group and others who prefer to work out solo and with one or two partners. If you’re the later one, then this article is for you.

Since 2001, 3-D Fitness has been helping people to design their dream private gyms. If you can dedicate at least 150 sq ft  space, we know exactly what to do with it. Equipment choices are essential. We interview you and guide you, so you can arrive with the best equipment choices possible, but prior to furnishing your gym with equipment, we need to create an environment for functional, safe and motivational fitness. We call it Design for Movement (DFM). The elements of DFM include:

  1. Flooring
  2. Lightning
  3. HVAC
  4. Walls treatment
  5. Audio/video
  6. Mirrors
  7. Art
  8. Custom solutions

Please visit www.thegymdesign.com and contact us to discuss our design services and equipment recommendations.

Home Gym – Convenient Path to Consistency

Home Gym – Convenient Path to Consistency

March 01, 2019

We all know that staying fit is important, but it requires a continuous investment of effort and time. We need to set time aside and make sure that we are able to do it daily. We need to make it a habit.

It’s not easy to develop good habits, especially when the results come only when we are consistent. There are multiple ways to make healthy lifestyle a permanent commitment. We are all different, but knowing who we are and being honest with ourselves and constructive in our own criticism certainly helps to build a solid foundation.

For some people hiring a trainer may be a solution. For others, connecting with nature and staying outdoors does the trick. However, one element that we all have in common is the need for convenience.

One of the few examples of how to make our fitness journey more convinient is to invest in home gym. It won’t be cheap if no corners are cut, but it will be ours for ever. It will be a sanctuary where our body and mind connect and it certainly will be convinient.

Choosing and buying home gym equipment can be confusing. How to furnish our gym where every square inch is precious. We, at 3-D Fitness have been designing gyms since 2001 and the challenge of limited space is our obsession. That’s why we designed beautifully crafted wooden equipment – FORMA.

Our FORMA totus offers:

  1. Stall Bars
  2. Pull up Bar
  3. Bench
  4. Gymnastic Rings
  5. Bungee Bands

FORMA totus needs 40 sq ft in action and takes only 2 sq ft while at rest. Five elements of totus interact with one another and we interact with them practicing countles movements and drills. FORMA totus takes care of our cardiovascular health and keeps us strong and flexible. It builds lean, yet seriously powerful muscles. It’s fun because it has unlimited options for movement and it’s convinient.

Begin with FORMA. Add a few more fitness items. Stretch your options. Arrive at your destination.

To order FORMA equipment, visit this link:  thegymdesign.com.

Designing Your Perfect Home Gym

Designing Your Perfect Home Gym

Are you tired of using sweaty or worn-out equipment of your local gym? Do you find yourself wasting time between sets while you anxiously wait for someone to finish using the machine or space? Is the time required for to travel to and from the gym taking away from the time you can devote to your workout? Are you tired of paying hefty monthly or annual gym fees and not getting your fair share? If you have answered yes to any of the above questions then it may be time to design your own gym.

3-D Fitness is one of few companies that make home gym design a special niche. Our creative approach – Design for Movement (DFM) has been a fruit of many years of experience, curiosity and love for athletic training.

Here are a few things that you should consider before creating your home gym.

1.    Budget

We recommend that you purchase high quality equipment, which will last and ensure better quality training. Home gyms generally evolve with time unless you are willing to spend a lot in one shot. Otherwise, your gym can grow as your fitness journey gets complex. You can begin by buying simple fitness equipment online with a goal to add as you go.

2.    Atmosphere

A home gym for a fitness lover is like a walk-in closet for a fashionista. Fill it with items that inspire you. It could be a poster of your favorite athlete or sports discipline. Music is a great motivator; set up a sound system, which could be anything from a portable speaker to big-blasting woofers. Every detail matters, colors, materials, scents, make it a space you enjoy.

3.    Essential Equipment

The essential, endorsed by 3-D Fitness equipment includes proper flooring (never skimp on flooring), olympic bar, plate set, bench, kettlebells, pull up bar, gymnastic rings, bungee bands, foam roller and YOU. Your equipment choices will vary as per your training needs and priorities.

Remember and make sure that

Equipment, Design and Training All Work Together.

To request gym design services, or to order finest quality gym equipment for your home, check this link: thegymdesign.com

100 Essential Skills by YOU.ARE.THE.GYM Athletics

You don’t need to be a professional, or ex-professional athlete (I never was) to conquer 100 Essential YOU.ARE.THE.GYM Skills.

I designed them in a very special way, so we can teach almost anyone how to collect all One Hundred Skills.

We teach how to intensify connection between your brain and body and use this to your advantage. All the while practicing interesting and challenging movements.

As you keep collecting your capital, you suddenly find yourself on fulfilling and accelerating journey, which we hope, will become a big part of your lifestyle.

The diversity of YOU.ARE.THE.GYM and its insistence on outdoor activities will shape you into a healthy All-In-One athlete.

  • Connect
  • Practice
  • Collect Your Capital
  • Remember
  • YOU.ARE.THE.GYM

Run Free

Everyday, we command our bodies to perform thousands of automatic movements. We want to move with grace and efficiency, yet, many of us lack proper dialogue with our skeletal and muscular systems.

For most people running is a naturally acquired skill. That being the case, why don’t we all run the same way? Why so many different running styles?

Before our discussion begins, you need to do your homework.

1. Go to a busy road running area, such as Central Park in New York City and observe at least 5 distinctly different running styles. Pay attention to the lower and upper body. See what part of the runner’s foot hits the ground first.
2. Visualize each running style with your eyes closed and give each style a nickname, or a buzz word.
3. Prepare a short verbal description of each running technique, that you’ve observed.

This exercise will open your mind to observing and analyzing bodies in motion. You will realize your own running style is unique. To increase the efficiency of your running you must focus on the sensory information flowing from the bones, joints and muscles to your brain and then process this information to self adjust.

While analyzing running, we need to acknowledge that there are runners with anatomical restrictions, therefor their technique can not be corrected (example: a person with “knocked” knees will always have a technique specific to that person). It’s the movement expert’s responsibility, to separate reformable errors from those that are impossible to change.

The entire process of redesigning one’s running technique is more intellectual, than it is physical. It’s reversed engineering, that requires patience and mental flexibility. I never hand my students a list of errors to be corrected on their own. Instead, I teach them how to perform and think at the same time. PRACTICE it’s our new word for training. PRACTICE is conscious training, where people develop better dialogue between their brains and bodies.

Top Of The Head

Practice:
Moving along the sinusoid of a very low amplitude (as close to a straight line as possible).

Remove:
Following the sinusoid of a high amplitude. Running is a linear forward motion and mixing it up with a vertical component is a waste of your energy.

Neck

Practice:
Keeping it long and neutral.

Remove:
Flexing (looking down). Extending (looking at the sky above you). “Poked neck” position. You will compress your discs and the position of your head will affect your entire running posture.

Shoulders

Practice:
Pushing back and down.

Remove:
Rounding your shoulders. It decreases your lung capacity and interferes with healthy spinal curvature. Shrugging your shoulders. It builds tension in your neck and middle back.

Scapulae

Practice:
Depressing with inferior anterior tilt.

Remove: Elevating with inferior posterior tilt. It builds tension in your shoulders, neck and middle back, decreases lung capacity and reduces healthy spinal curvature. Abducting. It rounds your upper back and interferes with proper running position.

Chest

Practice:
Keeping it out/pushed forward.

Remove:
Collapsing your chest. It will decrease your lung capacity and compromise healthy spinal curvature.

Humerus

Practice:
Keeping it neutral or rotating 2-3 degrees externally. 3-4 degrees of Flexing/Extending in the shoulder joint. Additional forward/backward humerus movement should be a product of your spinal rotation.

Remove:
Rotating internally. Your forearms will cross the mid line of your body and your spinal rotation will become too much of a “screw” motion interfering with your forward motion. Flexing/Extending (swinging forward and backward) excessively. It will cause shifts of your center of gravity and compete with the efficiency of forward motion.

Elbow

Practice:
Extending 90- 130 degrees.

Remove:
Flexing less than 90 degrees. It will reduce the blood flow to your forearm, hand and fingers and make your fingers and hand feel numb and uncomfortable. Flexing more than 85 degrees. It will make your forearm swing upward, causing conflict with forward motion. It will also cause tension in your arm/shoulder, related to biceps contraction.

Hand/Fingers

Practice:
Relaxing your hand and fingers. It will help you to keep your entire upper body relaxed, adding fluidity to your run.

Remove:
Flexing your fingers and making a fist. It will cause tension running all the way up to your upper trapezoids and diminish the freedom of your movement.

Spine

Practice:
Flexing 2-3 degrees forward from the bottom of your lumbar region. Stretching your spine long throughout its entire length. Rotating 15-20 degrees. Relax your upper body and the amount of rotation should take place naturally.

Remove:
Keeping torso upward, or leaning it backward. You no longer support the forward motion of your legs by shifting your center of gravity into the direction of your run. Collapsing/compressing your spine. Healthy spine position is essential while engaging in highly repetitive routines. It will also decrease the ability of abdominal wall muscles to pull the pelvis up to a forward pelvic tilt. Locking your spine and preventing rotation. Spinal rotation is a natural way of generating healthy running momentum.

Pelvis

Practice:
Tilting your pelvis forward (pushing your belly button toward your spine). Do it by engaging abdomen wall muscles. It will suspend your heavy pelvis structure and allow your legs to perform with greater freedom.

Remove:
Tilting your pelvis backward, or keeping it neutral. It will push your pelvis down and increase amount of downward force transferred to your hips, knees and ankle joints. Your stride will become more loaded. Your lower back will be working harder throughout the entire run.

Hips

Practice:
Flexing and extending only.

Remove:
Any internal or external rotation. It will extend the time between your strides, make you slower and less efficient.

Lower Legs

Practice:
Moving only in a sagittal plain. The distance between your R & L knees and R & L ankles should always remain constant throughout the running cycle.

Remove:

Any additional movements, that would change the distance between your R & L knees or R & L ankles throughout the running cycle. This will not only lower the efficiency of your run, but may also lead to injury.

Stride

Practice:
The space between your feet should be close to the width of your femurs proximal heads.* While striding, your feet should be as little externally rotated as possible. Hit the ground with the ball of your foot first. At take off, roll through your big toe as much as possible.

Remove:
Striding too close to the mid line of your body. It will reduce the power of your take off and put more strain on multiple areas of your body. Excessively externally rotated feet. It will lower the length of each running step, reduce the power of your stride and put more strain on your joints. The heel hits the ground first. With every single step you apply brakes to your forward motion and send shock waves running from your heel to the base of your scull.

Additional tips

We ended up with 13 body markings. You won’t be able to simultaneously wrap your brain around all 13 aspects at the same time. Remember, it takes patience and mental flexibility to make your run healthier and more efficient. Beginners can simplify things a little.

Upper body: Lean your tors 2-3 degrees forward and maintain perfect posture. Most people know what perfect posture is and this tip should be a good start.

Lower body: Pay attention to your stride. Hit the ground with the ball of your foot first.

Kick off your PRACTICE, focusing on the errors, that are easier to understand. Start going up the ladder until you tackle on the smallest nuances of your running. For additional training tips contact YOU.ARE.THE.GYM® Movement Lab @ Christof@thegymdesign.com.

 

  • It doesn’t apply to people with large Q angle