AntiGravity Fitness

AntiGravity Fitness is a fitness company founded by Christopher Harrison in 2007 and based in New York City, specializing in hybrid aerial fitness techniques that combine silk hammocks with modern yoga, pilates, ballet barre exercises, and traditional strength training techniques for aerialists into different exercise curriculums. Harrison first developed the initial program, AntiGravity aerial yoga, based on warm-up exercises through which he would lead his athletes as director/choreographer of the performance troupe AntiGravity, Inc.[1]

AntiGravity Fitness
Private
IndustryFitness
Founded2007
FounderChristopher Harrison
Headquarters
Number of locations
600+ licensed studios
ProductsHarrison AntiGravity Hammock
ServicesProgram licensing, product sales, teacher trainings, fitness instruction
ParentAntiGravity, Inc
Websiteantigravityfitness.com

History

In 1991, Christopher Harrison founded the acrobatic troupe AntiGravity to choreograph a performance for the New York Marathon. In the following decade, they performed in hundreds of live shows, corporate events, and advertising campaigns. Then in 1997, AntiGravity performed during the opening ceremonies of the Femina Miss India pageant, and Harrison, while unable to perform due to injury, cites this time in India as his first exposure to yoga and a major influence on the development of aerial yoga and what would become AntiGravity Fitness.[2]

Later, during a retreat at Club Med, Harrison and his performers came across a gazebo with hammocks hanging from the ceiling. After experimenting and developing a few flips, they hung up similar hammocks in their New York City rehearsal studio, The AntiGravity Skyloft. Harrison states that they soon discovered that "hanging upside down for a minute would take all the kinks out". The hammocks soon became a regular part of their warm-up routine.[2]

gollark: How did you *think* it worked?
gollark: What?
gollark: The stats thing should only count comment button clicks, because that's all I could easily measure.
gollark: How odd.
gollark: Oh, also, maybe I could hook into the infipage somehow.

See also

References

  1. Barrow, Karen (2011). "Gym Class: AntiGravity Yoga". The New York Times.
  2. Lange, Ali Taylor (2011). "The Upside Down Workout". Outside Online.
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