The Prince George Citizen

Gym owner fighting to restore his business

- MARK NIELSEN Local Journalism Initiative Reporter pgcitizen.ca Read the full story at

From warped walls to flying bars to salmon ladders, Riley Banzer knows a thing or two about negotiatin­g his way through a ninja-style obstacle course.

Banzer, 27, launched Olympus Freerunnin­g in September 2019 as a place for parkour enthusiast­s to practice their skills in a safe, indoor setting. He also hosted bouts of Battle Bow - like paintball but with bows and arrows, without the pointy ends, of course.

But less than six months later, in March 2020, Banzer had to shut down as health officials grappled with how best to stem the flood into intensive care units of patients struck with COVID-19 .

Five months later, he was able to reopen at 1721 Nicholson St. But measuring about 1,500 square feet, it is about half the size of the original. He’s had to put a significan­t portion of his equipment into storage and host smaller groups and classes.

“I didn’t know how long I was going to be closed so I ended up taking a smaller unit and condensing all my equipment just to stay alive during that first set of lockdowns,” he said.

“And now that things have kind of sort of evened out, I’m still stuck in this tiny little space where I can’t run my business at full capacity.”

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry has said restrictio­ns will be gradually eased starting on the Family Day long weekend if all goes according to plan.

With some light emerging at the end of the pandemic tunnel, Banzer is now in search of a spot three or four times larger and ideally with a higher ceiling.

“I will have to take a bit more financial risk in hopes that I can get back up and running but I did the same thing when I first started,” Banzer said. “It was no guarantee that people were going to come to my gym when I took on the bigger space, so I will just be repeating the cycle two years later.”

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