Texas continues to be one of the fastest-growing markets for fitness facilities in the U.S., driven by population growth, franchised gym expansion, and rising demand for boutique studios and high-performance training spaces.
However, gyms are also among the most operationally sensitive building types, where HVAC failures, electrical downtime, or fire protection delays can immediately disrupt business.
This guide outlines why fitness facilities are MEP-intensive, the most common design challenges architects face in Texas, and how operations-first MEP engineering helps prevent costly failures.
Unlike typical retail or office spaces, gyms operate under extreme and unpredictable loads:
According to the Health & Fitness Association (HFA), over 77 million Americans held gym memberships in 2024, and U.S. fitness facility usage continued to rise into 2025, increasing strain on building infrastructure.
In Texas cities like Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio, long operating hours combined with extreme heat and humidity make MEP reliability critical to revenue and member retention.
HVAC failures are the leading operational risk in fitness facilities, especially in high-occupancy gym environments where temperature, ventilation, and humidity directly affect member comfort and safety.
Many issues arise from undersized systems designed around average occupancy instead of peak usage during morning and evening rush hours.
Poor zoning between cardio areas, studios, locker rooms, and weight floors often leads to uneven temperatures and inadequate ventilation, while insufficient humidity control causes odors, condensation, and air quality concerns.
A lack of redundancy in critical air-handling equipment further increases the risk of complete shutdowns.
In Texas, where summer temperatures frequently exceed 100°F, HVAC downtime can force gym closures within hours—particularly in enclosed workout spaces.
Best-practice MEP solutions include demand-controlled ventilation using CO₂ sensors, dedicated HVAC zoning by activity type, high-latent-capacity systems for moisture control, and serviceable layouts that reduce maintenance downtime.
Learn more about our HVAC Design Services for high-occupancy commercial spaces.
Modern fitness facilities are highly power-intensive, with significant electrical demand from cardio and strength equipment, lighting, AV systems, and recovery technologies such as infrared and hydrotherapy.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration projects continued growth in commercial electricity demand through 2026, driven in part by power-dense facilities like gyms.
Electrical downtime often results from underestimated equipment loads, late vendor coordination, and shared electrical panels serving HVAC, lighting, and fitness equipment.
Many gyms are also designed without spare capacity, limiting future expansion and increasing the risk of overloads.
Effective MEP strategies focus on early coordination with equipment vendors, dedicated electrical panels for fitness equipment, spare conduits for future growth, and clear separation of life safety, HVAC, and general power systems to ensure reliability and compliance.
Explore our Electrical Design Services for power-intensive buildings.
Fire protection issues are a common cause of permitting delays in fitness projects. High ceilings with exposed ductwork and structure complicate sprinkler coverage, while frequent equipment layout changes can affect hazard classifications and sprinkler density requirements.
Mixed-use areas within gyms—such as training floors, storage rooms, and retail zones—further increase code complexity.
To avoid redesigns during plan review, fire protection engineering must be coordinated early with architectural layouts.
This includes early hazard classification analysis, coordinated sprinkler designs for exposed ceilings, and clear documentation for AHJ approval.
Flexible system layouts that accommodate future equipment changes help reduce long-term compliance risks.
Fire code missteps can delay gym openings by weeks or months, directly impacting ROI. Learn more about our Fire Protection design & Engineering Services and how early coordination keeps fitness projects on schedule.
For gym owners, MEP issues don’t just affect compliance — they affect member perception and retention.
Poor coordination results in:
A 2025 industry survey reported that facility comfort and cleanliness are top factors influencing gym membership retention, often outweighing equipment variety.
When MEP systems are designed around operations and user behavior, gyms perform better — both technically and commercially.
Our BIM Coordination Services help eliminate clashes and performance gaps before construction begins.
Texas gyms operate in a high-risk, high-reward environment. HVAC failures, power outages, or fire protection delays don’t just affect construction schedules — they directly impact revenue, reputation, and member trust.
An operations-first MEP strategy ensures:
Ready to future-proof your fitness project in Texas?
Contact us today for fitness-focused MEP design services that prioritize performance, reliability, and code compliance.