After Decades as Beloved Neighborhood Gym for Montrose and River Oaks, Fit Is Abruptly Closing

After Decades as Beloved Neighborhood Gym for Montrose and River Oaks, Fit Is Abruptly Closing

Fit Athletic Club, an institution of 20 years, was set to close its doors for good Aug. 31, having given members just hours' notice of the shuttering.

HARDBODIES IN THE Montrose and River Oaks area are in shock today as an institution of a gym abruptly announced it was closing.


Members of 20-year-old Fit Athletic Club, perched above the Marshall’s store in the strip center at the corner of Waugh and West Gray, were given just a few hours’ notice of the closure with a sign on the door. Employees were tipped off yesterday.

Jack Tompkins, who co-founded the gym in 2003 with a nightlife impresario named Scott Lutwak who later moved to San Diego to expand the brand to California, says he and his New York-based corporate landlords could not reach an agreement on a new lease and rent price. Tompkins said that, despite thinking until the last minute that a deal could be struck, the landlord’s representative ultimately said there would be no new contract.

“His job is to extract as much as he can,” says Tompkins. “My job is to not let him extract so much that I go bankrupt.” Tompkins declined to talk numbers, but the rumor mill — which has been very active both among members at the scene squeezing in one last workout, and on social media — puts the rent in the expiring lease at many tens of thousands per month.

Tompkins says he was disappointed that, in the end, his 20 years as a good tenant wasn’t sufficient to convince the landlord to reup. He speculated that there must be plan for the future use of the space the owners hadn’t divulged. Again, rumors swirled — that the space might be converted to offices. One member said they’d probably build a new high-rise apartment building in the parking lot.

Efforts to locate the landlord for comment were unsuccessful.

Fit has about 20 full-time employees, all of whom must now scramble to find new jobs, as nearly 2,000 members consider which gym to move to next.

Fit has evolved over the years from a scene-y setup popular with the gay community and a hip crowd of young professionals to a bit more of a laidback neighborhood gym — albeit with a pounding rock soundtrack and no shortage of pretty people.

Tompkins says he will begin looking at new spaces in the area with an eye toward reopening elsewhere.


A oversized punching bag greets members in the lobby of Fit.

Rows of cardio machines have a view of Downtown in the distance.

Wellness+Giving Back

A rendering of the aerial view of Lynn Wyatt Square

THE DOWNTOWN THEATER District is about to experience a transformation, with the long anticipated grand opening of Lynn Wyatt Square for the Performing Arts (LWS). Located within a “square” created by Texas avenue and Capitol, Smith and Louisiana streets, and flanked north and east by the Alley Theatre and Jones Hall, the beautifully designed, $26.5 million green space has it all: a flexible performance lawn for concerts, a cascading fountain, one-of-a-kind rockers and tête-à-tête seating, and plenty of accessible entries to its promenades and gardens. Wyatt made a $10 million gift toward the project, and Downtown Redevelopment Authority, Houston First, and numerous foundations funded the rest. LWS will be fully open to the public beginning Friday, Sept. 22.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment

ON AN ANCIENT, scratchy recording made circa 1926, Texas-born singer-guitarist Blind Lemon Jefferson began a song with the bold statement: “The blues came from Texas, loping like a mule.” The Lone Star state certainly birthed its own lonesome hybrid of the blues — distinct from the Mississippi Delta — that drew upon several styles of music, including big band music of the swing era, classic country and western, and Tejano music. And when it comes to the blues, jazz and rock and roll, Houston has a musical legacy that few other cities can match.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment