Life Time Highland Park Club Set for Major Expansion
Luxury redefined: Life Time is revamping its Highland Park club in a multi-million dollar project as CEO Bahram Akradi says the athletic country club operator is the best its ever been
Life Time is giving its Highland Park club a multi-million-dollar refresh and expanding the facility by 20,800 square feet ahead of its 30th anniversary.
The luxury lifestyle and athletic country club operator says the project highlights Life Time’s commitment to growth and expansion, even within its existing portfolio. The company confirms it’s given more than a dozen Life Time clubs major improvements in 2024 alone.
“Highland Park’s redevelopment was an opportunity for us to reimagine this beautiful club and add more than 20,000 square feet to create a true athletic country club experience for neighbors and residents,” said the president of club operations and chief of property development, Parham Javaheri.
Life Time Highland Park is one of the brand’s earliest clubs, having opened in 1995. Members can look forward to a new street-level space with dedicated spaces for GTX and Ultra Fit Signature Group Training programs and cardio and resistance machines for Dynamic Personal Training and open use. There will be a new Life Time Recovery zone featuring compression therapy, metabolic testing, recovery treatments, nutrition counseling and a LifeClinic chiropractic service. The revamp also includes a dedicated space for Alpha Signature classes, four studios for barre, cycle, yoga, and Class Collection formats, an updated Kids Academy and updates to the LifeSpa.
For the third quarter, Life Time reported a revenue increase of 18% to $693 million, driven by a 20% increase in membership dues and enrollment fees and a 16% increase from in-center revenue. Life Time center memberships also rose 5% compared to last year.
“We are, by far, the best version of ourselves that we have ever been,” Life Time CEO Bahram Akradi told investors during October’s earnings call.
The athletic country club operator continues to pursue its goal of being the top pickleball provider, with hundreds of courts in the works. Life Time also filed a patent for an improved pickleball ball this year.
Courtney Rehfeldt has worked in the broadcasting media industry since 2007 and has freelanced since 2012. Her work has been featured in Age of Awareness, Times Beacon Record, The New York Times, and she has an upcoming piece in Slate. She studied yoga & meditation under Beryl Bender Birch at The Hard & The Soft Yoga Institute. She enjoys hiking, being outdoors, and is an avid reader. Courtney has a BA in Media & Communications studies.