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Three Sure fire signs of a great lifting gym.

Good bars

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Every lifter worth their salt knows a bar makes or breaks a session.  The true lifting gyms don’t skimp on this bit of kit. Elikeo, Ivanko, Werkshan they stock a known brand which has a track record of standing up to rigorous use.  Anyone who has ever trained with a good bar and then trained off site on a budget bar will know exactly what I mean.  If your a weightlifter the quality of the bars in the gym you are looking at should be your primary concern.

 

Built in Platforms
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Lifting platforms are a bit of a fad at the minute with the riseof “performance facilities” (I put it in quotes because I don’t think a sports player making an arse out of a 40kg clean counts as performance sport) the sort of platforms you see commonly (powerlift as a prime example) return kinetic energy into the bar which causes it to rebound and bounce around like crazy if you drop if from overhead (an important aspect in many strength sports).

Straight up plywood platforms with plenty of space are the best spaces for weightlifting in my experience and a good old heavy duty rubber matt on some concerte will do for deadlifts so we can use steel plates and not chew up your 5000 quid over engineered waste of space you call a platform.

 

A mix of cages and squat stands

The main training hall

Nothing screams “well kitted gym” more than a good mix of power cages and bespoke weightlifting platforms.  The sort of place where you can rock up and do what ever you want with a barbell any time of the week.  Some people want to do rack pulls (with the cheap bars hopefully!) and some people want to do jerks out of the rack with obscenely expensive bars and not turn them into cheese strings by dropping them onto safety bars.  A great facility will allow for both kinds of gym monkeys to be happy!

Marc

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About Marc Keys

As a coach Marc's philosophy uses a minamilast approach that yields superior performance gains. Having worked as a coach for over 7 years providing support for athletes from over 30 sports (Olympic, Paralympic and commonwealth medallists) he has plenty of time to learn his craft.Marc currently works full time as a strength coach based in Edinburgh.A competitive power lifter for 5 years some carrer highlights include (2011 - British and Commonwealth Senior Champion, 2012 World Championship squad member for great britian and former holder of 3 British records). Marc Coaches strength and power sports in his spare time and continues to develop castironstrength.