Vitruvian Fitness Turns Two!

Tom Wigginton • May 2, 2012

Come help us celebrate another year in business!


To celebrate, we’re having an open house with catered hors d’oeuvres, wine, beer and refreshments plus great company and conversations.


Our second year has been a great ride! Lots of ups, a few downs, new clients, new friends and new opportunites. We’re so grateful to include you in the Vitruvian community. Together, we’ve done great things and have had so much fun doing them.

Vitruvian Fitness Turns Two!

In August, we expanded our studio into the space next door which gave us the ability to add more classes and train more clients at the same time. We absolutely love the extra space!


In November, we added a “Moms of Steel” morning class but quickly found out that more non-moms wanted to work out than moms. So, to include everyone, we changed the format to a good old-fashioned strength and conditioning bootcamp. And it’s turned out to be one of our more popular classes.


In January, we partnered with the Denver Stretch Institute. Andria, Shawn, Marsha, Alisha and Casie run an amazing service. They call it soft-tissue therapy and if you haven’t tried it yet, you should. Depending on what your issues are (and we all have issues), they have several techniques to help you resolve them. It’s not just stretch and it’s not just massage, it’s way more.


In February, we added Sunday yoga. Caren leads a very peaceful and restorative yoga flow that helps create calm and balance helping you close out the week before and prepare for the week ahead.


Throughout the year, we’ve added some terrific trainers and instructors. Natalie was our intern last summer. Emily and Geof just had their 1 year anniversaries last week. Melissa joined the team last June with her increadible energy. We were ecstatic to have Lee move here from Michigan and then sorry to see her return. Kathy joined the team in January, Caren in February and Sarah in April. We’re so excited to have each of them with their own unique talents and gifts.


Courtney has been with us as a client since the beginning and an instructor for about 15 months — her energy, enthusiasm, spirit and drive are contagious and embody so much of what Vitruvian is all about.


And of course, none of this would be possible without the support of my awesome wife Amy (BWE). Amy tolerates my long days, is patient with me when I bring stress home and encourages me to continue making Vitruvian a place where we can all play hard and be happy (and encourage you to eat well, of course).


To RSVP for the party, click here to do it online or just call us! We hope to see you Friday!

You might also enjoy these posts . . .

By Tom Wigginton June 5, 2025
How to create a cardio habit and turn it into a cardio lifestyle. We’ve talked about why cardio matters . You’ve got a handle on tr aining zones . And you’ve seen how we program your cardio training to maximize efficiency and results. But knowledge alone doesn’t build consistency. Cardio becomes the life-changing ingredient in your life when it becomes routine. So let’s talk about how to get started and how to make it stick —even if you don’t love it, even if your schedule is full, even if you’ve tried and failed before. This article is written mostly for the dabblers . The key is to get started, keep moving, and eventually create a new identity for yourself as someone who finds joy in their daily cardio habit. And to be clear, this isn’t about becoming a pro athlete. It’s about living longer, living better, protecting your independence as you age, and showing up for the future you want.
By Tom Wigginton May 30, 2025
How to build a cardio plan that matches your goals—whether you're in it to win it or just want to feel 10 years younger. Nobody wants to rust out too early and yet, not everybody wants to race either. Most people fall somewhere in between. Maybe you’re not chasing a podium, but you are chasing longevity and quality of life. Or, maybe you’re not training for a triathlon, but you do like to enjoy a long hike without needing three days to recover. Or maybe you are chasing podiums, glory, and fame! In any case, that's great! In part 1 of this series, we talked about Why Cardio Matters . In part 2, we talked about gauging your effort levels by Decoding Your Training Zones . If you haven’t read those, you will find them helpful. Whether your goal is vitality , confidence , or competition , there’s a cardio plan that fits. The trick is structuring it smartly based on what your body needs and your life allows.
By Tom Wigginton May 23, 2025
How you can train smarter to live longer, live better, and stay active and independent — maybe into your 90s or 100s. In our previous article, Why Cardio Matters , we talked about the benefits of doing cardio (like living longer) and introduced you to a few terms that might have been new: Zone 2, VO₂ Max, and lactate clearance. We also offered a general recommendation for how much cardio to do weekly. This article takes the next step: breaking down how the intensity you work at affects the benefits you get from each training session. The science of exercising is rich, complex, exciting, and overwhelming. Besides the fact that it is indeed complicated, it’s made worse by having acronyms for everything, buzzy catchphrases, and intimidating fitness personalities. This is where I’m going to try to make this easier to understand, convey why you should care, and encourage you to add cardio to your daily, weekly, monthly, seasonal lifestyles.
By Tom Wigginton May 16, 2025
“Doing cardio.” What even does that mean? For some people, it’s hopping on the rower, bike, ski erg, treadmill, or elliptical and checking the box for however long Tom said to do it, then sneaking out before anyone asks questions. Others train for sanity. It helps manage stress, clear the mind, and release a flood of feel-good chemistry. Also in this category are people who actually just love to run, bike, swim, or play sportsball purely for the fun. And then there are those training for performance—to win races, set PRs, and push personal limits. All of this is cardio. And yet, when you zoom out and look at the data, it becomes clear that cardiovascular fitness does something that has a very measurable outcome: it extends your lifespan . And while we’ve all heard that cardio is good for your heart, most people don’t realize just how deep that benefit runs. And as in the case of so many other aspects of life, the broader public often benefits from the insights that trickle down from elite performance research. So whether you're reluctantly doing cardio or chasing a vibe, you’re tapping into the same physiological systems that turn podium-seekers into podium winners.
How to Select the Right Weight for Each Lift
By Tom Wigginton May 9, 2025
Question: “How do I select a weight for an exercise, and when should I go up?” We get this question literally several times every single day. And the answer isn't just “go heavier.” The answer is: it depends. Heavier is better—when heavier is appropriate. Sometimes you should go lighter and move faster. Sometimes you should go longer with the same weight. Sometimes you shouldn’t lift at all. Smart weight selection is about clarity, context, and responsiveness. Here’s how we think through it: 1. Is the Movement High-Quality? Before anything else, we ask: Are you doing the movement well? This is Phase 3 work— movement mastery . If you’re still learning the pattern, ironing out inefficiencies, or rebuilding capacity post-injury, weight selection should support technical precision. That means: Moving in clean lines Feeling the right muscles Owning each rep from start to finish
Strength Training and Prostate Cancer: What the Research Says — and How to Get Started
By Tom Wigginton May 9, 2025
A prostate cancer diagnosis can feel like a loss of control. Treatments like hormone therapy or radiation are often necessary and effective, but they can come with side effects that chip away at quality of life — fatigue, muscle loss, weight gain, anxiety, and more. But there’s a growing body of research that points to something powerful you can control: your strength. Strength Training as a Therapeutic Tool Over the past decade, studies have consistently shown that regular, structured exercise — particularly strength training — can improve outcomes for men with prostate cancer. Here’s what the science tells us:
Show More