Welcome to The Pilates Club

We are a team of dedicated Pilates instructors looking to take you on your Pilates journey whether you are injured, need some maintenance or just some time for you.

At The Pilates Club, we want to make exercise fun and informative, so you can grow from strength to strength both physically and mentally.

We offer small group classes in Ickenham, 1-2-1 tuition and workplace packages in Eastcote, Ruislip, Uxbridge, Harefield, and Central London. Then if you want a little bit more we also offer Workshops and Retreats at a variety of locations throughout the year.
Our Classes
"I’ve been going to The Pilates Club now for over 7 years and still find it uplifting and very beneficial. I may start the class feeling tired but always finish feeling so glad I made the effort to go. Classes are for all abilities and everyone is very friendly."
Veronica L.

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News & Information

Ramblings of a Pilates Instructor

By Becky Hughes 20 Sep, 2019
New Beginner courses at The Pilates Club Jan 2020 - Mar 20
By Alexis Kaliszewski 02 Jun, 2018
Summer School dates are now available, and bookings can commence…. Classes will be £11 per session; work out which dates you will be here for and email us and we’ll get you booked on ASAP. Becky will be teaching most of the classes, but Angelina will do a few and we will update the schedule with instructor details as we agree them. If you can’t join us over the summer don’t worry, we’ll be back to normal timetables from September 10th SUMMER CLASS TIMETABLE
By Alexis Kaliszewski 01 Jun, 2018
German-born Joseph Pilates was living in England and working as a circus performer and boxer when he was placed in forced internment in England at the outbreak of World War I. While in the internment camp, he began to develop the floor exercises that evolved into what we now known as the Pilates Mat work. As time went by, Joseph Pilates began to work with rehabilitating detainees who were suffering from diseases and injuries. It was invention born of necessity that inspired him to utilise items that were available to him, like bed springs and beer keg rings, to create resistance exercise equipment for his patients. These were the unlikely beginnings of the equipment we use today, like the reformer and the magic circle. Developing his Fitness Regime Joseph Pilates developed his work from a strong personal experience in fitness. Unhealthy as a child, he studied many kinds of self-improvement systems. He drew from Eastern practices and Zen Buddhism. He was inspired by the ancient Greek ideal of man perfected in the development of body, mind and spirit. On his way to developing the Pilates Method, Joseph Pilates studied anatomy and developed himself as a bodybuilder, wrestler, gymnast, boxer, skier and diver. UK to Germany to New York City After WWI, Joseph Pilates briefly returned to Germany where his reputation as a physical trainer and healer preceded him. In Germany, he worked briefly for the Hamburg military police in self-defence and physical training. In 1925, he was asked to train the German army. Instead, he packed his bags and took a boat to New York City. On the boat to America, Joseph met Clara, a nurse, who would become his wife. He went on to establish his studio in New York and Clara worked with him as he evolved the Pilates method of exercise, invented the Pilates exercise equipment, and trained students. Creating a Studio in New York Joseph Pilates taught in New York from 1926 to 1966. During that time, he trained a number of students who not only applied his work to their own lives but became teachers of the Pilates method themselves. This first generation of teachers who trained directly with Joseph Pilates is often referred to as the Pilates Elders. Some committed themselves to passing along Joseph Pilates' work exactly as he taught it. This approach is called “classical style” Pilates. Other students went on to integrate what they learned with their own research in anatomy and exercise sciences. The Dancing Scene Joseph Pilates' New York studio put him in close proximity to a number of dance studios, which led to his discovery by the dance community. Many dancers and well-known persons of New York depended on Pilates method training for the strength and grace it developed in the practitioner, as well as for its rehabilitative effects. Dancers and elite athletes kept Joseph Pilates' work alive until exercise science caught up with the Pilates exercise principles in the 1980s and the surge of interest in Pilates that we have today got underway. The Legacy of Joseph Pilates Joseph Pilates passed away in 1967. He maintained a fit physique throughout his life, and many photos show that he was in a remarkable physical condition in his older years. He is also said to have had a flamboyant personality. He smoked cigars, liked to party, and wore his exercise briefs wherever he wanted (even on the streets of New York). It is said that he was an intimidating, though deeply committed, instructor. Clara Pilates continued to teach and run the studio for another 10 years after Joseph Pilates' death. Today, his legacy is carried on by a large group of contemporary teachers. Want to learn a bit more about Joseph… Joseph Pilates called his work Contrology. He defined Contrology as “the comprehensive integration of body, mind and spirit.” He authored two books: "Return to Life through Contrology" (1945) with William J. Miller. This book illustrates his core 34 mat exercises. In it, he conveys the breadth and power of the Pilates method philosophy and technique for whole-body health. "Your Health: A Corrective System of Exercising That Revolutionizes the Entire Field of Physical Education" (1934).
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"I have been doing Pilates with a number of different teachers for a few years. Classes with Becky are more fun than with any of the others but don’t imagine that means they’ll be easy - she always finds a way to push each student in the class to do just that little bit more so we all get a great workout. What I particularly appreciate though is that she takes time in every class to truly check that everyone is fine and there are no injuries she needs to be aware of - in my experience, most teachers don’t listen to what anyone says even if they ask the question in the first place!"
Gavin K.
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