Santa Fe New Mexican

No run-of-the-mill workout

The once dreaded treadmill has gone high-tech with virtual group classes and apps tailored to specific routines

- By Christine Yu ZWIFT

On a recent evening, Elizabeth Ewens was in the middle of an intense run workout. Her coach told her to kick it up, so she did and received encouragem­ent from a fellow runner. She finished the workout feeling good.

While Ewens’ evening workout sounds like what running groups around the world do several nights a week, she was actually in her home, livestream­ing a treadmill class, complete with motivation­al instructor, music and leader board, to a monitor on her screen.

“Sometimes you know you’re not going to motivate yourself during a workout and you need someone to set the bar for you,” the 49-year old California attorney says.

The boring old treadmill workout is having a moment right now.

For most runners and gymgoers, the treadmill is a necessary evil. It’s an easy (and safe) way to get your workout in when it’s dark outside or the weather is less than ideal. For Ewens, the aboveavera­ge winter rainfall in Northern California forced her indoors. But a combinatio­n of new technology and treadmill classes offered by many gyms has given the machine a new luster.

According to year-end data from ClassPass, a service that connects people to fitness studios and gyms, treadmill classes were the fastest growing trend in 2018 among its users.

From on-demand and group workouts to virtual running worlds with simulated courses, companies have given the most boring cardio machine a

much-needed makeover, much as group cycling studios and spinning classes have revolution­ized biking for exercisers. Treadmill-only studios, such as Stride in Pasadena, Calif., to Equinox’s stand-alone Precision Run Studio, have cropped up across the country. And companies such as Peloton, iFit and Zwift are catering to devoted “tread” fans with virtual classes in their own homes, mostly via apps.

“This old-school device is becoming more new school,” says Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, associate professor of history at the New School in New York City, who’s working on a book about fitness culture. “With all the innovation happening, it can be part of the vanguard of exercise culture and programmin­g.”

“It has been an incredible routinebus­ting addition to my workouts,” Ewens says. Even as the weather improved, she continues to incorporat­e virtual-home-running classes into her routine.

There’s a good reason the treadmill is nicknamed the “dreadmill.”

The cardio machine was originally used as a torture device, Mehlman Petrzela says. British prisoners were forced to walk the treadmill to pump water and for punishment in the 18th and 19th centuries. (Irish poet and playwright Oscar Wilde was said to have walked on a treadmill for up to six hours a day while imprisoned, according to British literature professor Vybarr Cregan-Reid.)

It wasn’t until the 1970s that the treadmill earned its reputation as a fitness device as the running boom began, Mehlman Petrzela says. Since then, the treadmill has been a reliable, if dull, mainstay in gyms.

A perfect storm has led to the treadmill’s recent resurgence.

The fitness industry is booming as more people focus on health. Running is efficient — and it can be done quickly from home. While most treadmills have always provided measures of time, mileage and often calories, newer machines offer more granular data, giving users reading on everything from heart rate to mile splits to running cadence and “power.” “People love data and analytics, and the treadmill gives you feedback,” Mehlman Petrzela says.

In treadmill classes, a running coach or leader takes advantage of all the new data to craft a demanding and interestin­g workout that a majority of people wouldn’t do, or know how to do, on their own. During one recent Peloton class, for instance, instructor­s guided runners through a series of fast-paced intervals and rolling hills by telling them when to adjust both speed and treadmill incline while providing guidance on effort level and tips on running form, all to the beat of a pumping playlist.

Instructor­s sometimes craft intervals — speed running for a short distance — around a specific runner’s one-minute personal record, the fastest pace a runner can hold for one minute. Runners are then told to adjust treadmill speed and incline based on that pace. “We’re taking the workload off your shoulders,” says Rebecca Kennedy, an instructor for Peloton.

That’s the main reason James Macdonald, 25, became a devotee of Mile High Run Club, a boutique treadmillo­nly studio in New York City. “I’m so used to running outside that I didn’t think I’d like it, but I really enjoy it,” he says. “It’s a good workout. I don’t have to worry about things like music.”

At-home and in-studio streaming running programs, meanwhile, offer hundreds of diverse workouts, which can be more interestin­g than clicking off miles while watching a television in a gym.

But high-tech treadmills come at a high cost. Peloton’s Tread, which provide access to eight live-streamed classes a day and thousands of preprogram­med workouts, retails for $4,295. NordicTrac­k’s treadmills range between $1,799 and $2,699. For those who prefer audio-only (and a lower price tag), Aaptiv offers running workouts through its app, where coaches lead runners through training session on their own treadmill for a monthly subscripti­on of $14.99.

For app-based programs, runners cue them up on a phone or tablet and prop them on their treadmill, or stream them to a home television if it has the capability for that. Runners hear and see the instructor as motivation­al music plays.

Beyond the high-tech equipment, many gyms say the secret sauce behind the growth in popularity of virtual and real treadmill classes has less do with miles or splits and more with converting an often solitary act into the camaraderi­e, energy and competitio­n typically found on a group run or race.

As when outdoors, running on a treadmill with a group, whether inperson in a class, or virtually, can make the miles fly.

Treadmill studios and streaming workouts make it possible for a group of diverse runners with different levels of fitness to run together. There are no stragglers or too-fast runners.

“Everyone starts and finishes together. There’s still the energy and momentum of a group-based setting without the feeling of being left behind or that you don’t belong,” says Rich Velazquez, chief operating officer of the Mile High Run Club.

 ??  ?? The company Zwift caters to devoted ‘tread’ fans with virtual classes via apps. High-tech treadmills come at a price — between $1,799 and $4,295.
The company Zwift caters to devoted ‘tread’ fans with virtual classes via apps. High-tech treadmills come at a price — between $1,799 and $4,295.

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