Lululemon is bringing its Studio concept to Los Angeles with Studio Yet, a three week, high intensity training space on Melrose Avenue designed around intention fueled workouts, runs, and community events. The pop up hub runs from February 18 to March 8 at 8175 Melrose Ave, with sessions led by world renowned trainers and coaches across strength, conditioning, mobility, and run focused formats.
Intention-led training on Melrose
Studio Yet is positioned as your place to push past ‘can’t’ and ‘haven’t’, inviting guests to pursue bold performance goals in a controlled, high energy environment. The programming blends early morning sessions, mid day blocks and evening classes, turning the space into an all day destination for people who treat training as a central part of their lifestyle rather than a once in a while add on.
Lululemon frames the experience as a mix of intention fueled workouts and runs, world renowned trainers and coaches, and moments of connection you didn’t see coming, underscoring the social side of the Studio Yet format. The brand explicitly invites guests to save their spot through the link in bio, emphasizing limited capacity and appointment style access.
Trainer Roster and Schedule
The Studio Yet schedule reads like a curated festival of performance and recovery sessions. Across the three weeks, the space hosts formats such as KR Method by Korey Rowe, Strength Lab Cakes x Core by Melissa Alcantara, Pilates Lift & Lengthen by Shannon Nadj, Tralli Train by Matt Tralli, Train Like a Pro by Jamal Liggin, Strength From Within by Kirk Myers, BARRY’S Lift by Joey Gonzalez, Pure Energy by Dolvett Quince, Sculpt X by Leyon Azubuike, Strength & Sculpt by Dani Coleman, Bring The Heat by Ryan Leier, Strength and Shake by Melania Antuchas, Athletic Flow by Kaisa Keranen, Total Body Strength Circuit and Box & Sculpt by Erika Hammond, and Strength in Sync by Alex Sapot, among others.
Ticketed events like the Community Competition by Jamal Liggin and Bring The Heat by Ryan Leier add set piece moments to the calendar, with pricing around $40 per session for many classes. Together, the roster positions Studio Yet as a place to train with names typically associated with boutique studios, pro athlete conditioning, and digital workout platforms, condensed into one address.
How Studio Yet fits Lululemon’s strategy
Studio Yet in Los Angeles sits alongside the Lululemon Studio digital platform (formerly Mirror), which offers more than 10,000 classes on demand and live via at home hardware and app based access. By activating a physical space with top tier coaches and curated sessions, Lululemon is effectively tightening the loop between its apparel, its digital fitness subscription, and in person community experiences in a key U.S. fitness market.
For LA runners, lifters, and studio regulars, Studio Yet offers a time-limited way to experience a broad cross section of training styles and coaching personalities without switching memberships or crisscrossing the city. For Lululemon, it is another example of how the brand is using high touch, event driven spaces to deepen engagement, sell product in a performance context, and reinforce its positioning at the intersection of technical apparel and modern training culture.
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