You are reading

Blink Fitness to open in Woodside this summer, club already offering deals

File photo

File photo

March 31, 2016 By Christian Murray

Blink Fitness is opening a Woodside facility this summer and the club is already offering deals to entice people to join.

The company aims to open a gymnasium at 56-02 Roosevelt Avenue in June, according to Michael Fisher, who will be managing the Woodside facility. Blink is currently converting an empty, dilapidated manufacturing building located by the subway tracks into the new gym.

The Woodside facility will occupy two floors. The ground floor will consist of treadmills, bicycles, office space, locker rooms and a reception area. The upstairs will largely be dedicated to gym equipment, a stretching area and free weights.

Fisher, who is touting the club’s discount pricing and modern equipment, was underneath the 7 train station at 46th Street today offering promotional materials and deals.

Fisher said the monthly rate is $15 for members who sign up for a year and only use the Woodside facility, while it is $20 to $25 per month for those who enter into a one-year contract and want to use multiple Blink gyms.

He said the typical signup fee ranges from $50 to $100 but Blink is offering all members who sign up before the Woodside location opens a $1 sign on charge.

A representative of Blink at a meeting last year estimated that between 5,000 and 7,000 people would become members of the Woodside facility, with about 600 to 700 members using it per day.

The club anticipates that between 70 and 100 members would be at the facility during a regular hour.

A representative of facility said last year that it was going to open in 2017 but the date has since changed.

Blink currently has about 40 locations throughout New York and New Jersey. It opened a facility in Astoria in January 2014 and one in Jackson Heights in the fall of 2014.

For more details on how to signup, click here

 

 

 

email the author: news@queenspost.com

5 Comments

Click for Comments 
Jason T Beers

New York Sports Club in Sunnyside better pull their cleanliness and gym together or they are gonna lose most of there members. I am interested in checking it out as NYSC is going down hill fast. No towels, soap, tissues & paper towels to dry hands. WTF? Not even must playing in gym!

Reply
Long time resident

Blink is too low rent for a pool. As a former Blink member my advice is to go check out the Jackson Heights location at a non-peak hour – say 2 pm – and see how packed it is. It will be a mad house, and that’s why I’m a former member.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Queens Together launches ‘Unofficial US Open Dining Guide’ encouraging fans to sample restaurants along the 7 line

Aug. 20, 2025 By Shane O’Brien

The US Open returns to Flushing Meadows Corona Park this Sunday, with more than 1 million attendees anticipated to take mass transit to the iconic annual tennis event. With hundreds of thousands of fans set to take the 7 out to the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, there is a world of delicious local eateries lying beneath the elevated train tracks should any fan wish to stop en-route to the US Open.

Can Queens’ food scene thrive with both trucks and restaurants?

Aug. 19, 2025 By Jessica Militello

In Jackson Heights at 4 p.m. on a Thursday afternoon, Roosevelt Avenue is buzzing with energy as commuters file in and out of subway cars and onto the street and cars and trucks grapple to get down the busy road. The street is filled with rows of shops and restaurants, along with food carts, street vendors and food trucks along the avenue. The almost-but-not-quite the weekend lag leaves hungry commuters faced with another choice to make throughout their day and the array of food truck options in busy areas like Jackson Heights offers customers convenience and delicious food without breaking the bank, two features that can feel vital, particularly with rising costs of living and pressure from inflation.