Peloton plans retail showroom at St. Johns Town Center

The interactive fitness company will sell bikes and treadmills.


An artist’s rendering of the Peloton showroom proposed at St. Johns Town Center in the current Tommy Bahama site. Tommy Bahama is relocating across the street.
An artist’s rendering of the Peloton showroom proposed at St. Johns Town Center in the current Tommy Bahama site. Tommy Bahama is relocating across the street.
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Peloton Interactive Inc. plans to open a retail showroom for its exercise equipment at St. Johns Town Center.

The city is reviewing a permit application for Peloton, based in New York City, to build-out a 3,228-square-foot showroom at an estimated cost of $800,000.

Peloton intends to open at 4663 River City Drive, Suite V15. The location is the site of Tommy Bahama, which plans to relocate early next year across the street to a larger store that will include a Marlin Bar.

It will be the seventh Peloton in Florida and one of at least 75 in the U.S. Peloton said it operates 81 showrooms in the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom and Germany.

Peloton will stock treadmills, bikes and offer a trial test lounge.

No contractor is listed. Howell Belanger Castelli Architects of New York City is the architect.

According to onepeloton.com, the company was founded in 2012 to create a new concept in fitness – developing an indoor cycling studio experience for customers to use at home.

The site describes Peloton as the world’s largest interactive fitness platform with more than 1.4 million members.  

“We pioneered connected, technology-enabled fitness and the streaming of immersive, instructor-led boutique classes to our members anytime, anywhere,” says the site.

It says its instructors teach classes that include indoor cycling, indoor/outdoor running and walking, bootcamp, yoga, strength training, stretching and meditation.

Business Insider reported Oct. 21 that Peloton was launched with a $2,000 high-tech fitness bike that enabled users to stream live and on-demand classes from anywhere.

“The bike quickly became one of the buzziest workouts around, as it had solved one of the biggest downsides of working out at home: having to work out alone and not having the encouragement of a group to keep you motivated,” Business Insider wrote.

In 2018, Peloton added a $4,000 treadmill with a streaming experience through a screen attached to the front. It then rolled out an app that costs $19.49 a month for access to workouts that can be done on standard gym equipment, Business Insider reported.

Peloton reported that it raised $1.26 billion when it went public Sept. 30, offering 40 million shares.

The 2020 fiscal year ends June 30.

Peloton reported in its first-quarter highlights that the member base grew to more than 1.6 million and revenue more than doubled to $228 million in the quarter that ended Sept. 30.

It said members averaged 11.7 workouts a month, up from 8.9 the year before.

Peloton wasn’t yet making a profit but reported the net loss improved by almost $5 million to a loss of $49.8 million.

 

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