Los Angeles Times

Work industriou­sly at Aerospace

- health@latimes.com

BY SOPHIA KERCHER >>> What if the anger about our unjust world was taken out in a boxing class instead of by devouring cake, writing anxious posts on social media or crying into a pillow? ¶ This past month, after the bad news vortex, my air punches at Aerospace High Performanc­e Center, a new boutique boxing gym in West Hollywood, took on a surprising forcefulne­ss. There was a sense that the whole room of fit men and women, mostly in their 20s to 40s, was savoring a similar release.

Aerospace offers challengin­g 60-minute, boxing-inspired fitness classes with high-intensity jump rope intervals and jabs with light weights, as well as “impact” sessions that involve hitting boxing bags paired with grueling bootcamp-like exercises.

It is these techniques that have gotten the likes of Demi Moore, Eva Mendez and Will Smith into killer shape. The fitness method is the brainchild of former ballerina Leila Fazel and her partner, onetime pro boxer Michael Olajide Jr.

With Olajide’s striking silver metal eye patch, wiry frame and metallic wings on his sneakers, he appears more of a comic-book character than a fitness coach; as it turns out, the secret power to Olajide’s fitness method is in his eye.

He came up with his intensive cardio boxing-inspired fitness method after injuring his eye in a boxing match, leading him to shift his career. In the early 2000s his Aerospace classes took off in New York City and attracted a ton of celebrity clients. Now he’s taken his methods to the West Coast.

Aerospace’s new West Hollywood location has sleek white walls, compliment­ary towels and a pristine white locker room. Newcomers are recommende­d to start with “Intro to Aerospace,” which is a high-cardio class with shadow boxing (or punching in the air).

The boxing sequences are simple at first but quickly get more complex by building into more difficult and quick-paced combinatio­ns.

For those looking for an even

more grueling class, there’s “Aero C.A.M.P.,” which focuses on footwork and core strength. For the more traditiona­l boxing classes there’s “Aerospace Impact.”

After an intro class, my arms burned from air punches and I became winded from jumping up and down; Aerospace coaches keep going long after you want to pause. A regular assured me that it gets a little easier with time. He said he comes with his teenage son, who can “get out of his head” and blow off some steam.

The boxing class is no solution to the world’s evils (or your own), but you can barely think as the challengin­g cardio leaves you gulping for air while you relish each swing, and the only thing to do is to keep moving.

 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? OWNERS of Aerospace High Performanc­e Center Leila Fazel and Michael Olijade Jr. mimic a mural in the West Hollywood gym, where workouts are boxing-inspired.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times OWNERS of Aerospace High Performanc­e Center Leila Fazel and Michael Olijade Jr. mimic a mural in the West Hollywood gym, where workouts are boxing-inspired.
 ??  ?? OLIJADE adds his winged sneakers to a tableau of boxing gloves. Once a pro boxer, he devised his cardio workout after an injury.
OLIJADE adds his winged sneakers to a tableau of boxing gloves. Once a pro boxer, he devised his cardio workout after an injury.

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