Natural light first
Daylight wherever the architecture allows, layered with warm, dimmable lighting everywhere else.
Our gym is our greatest differentiator — a sensory-rich environment designed, down to the last detail, to invite movement, curiosity, and calm. Explore it room by room.
Six spaces, one continuous room — choose a space to see what happens there.
Every corner is an invitation.
Swings, climbing walls, crash pads, and suspended equipment — the heart of the studio, where the brain is built through the body.
The light, the materials, the sound, the space to move — a nervous system registers all of it in seconds. So we designed an environment that says, before anyone speaks: you are safe here.
Most clinics feel like clinics — fluorescent, cluttering, clinical. We built the opposite. Every surface, sound, and sightline was chosen to lower the body's guard so the real work can begin.
Natural light wherever possible, warm tones everywhere else — never the buzz of fluorescents.
Acoustics and materials chosen to absorb noise, so an overwhelmed child isn't asked to filter chaos.
Open, uncluttered space invites the climbing, swinging, and crashing that regulates the body.
Good design disappears. These are the quiet decisions doing the work long before a child realizes they've relaxed.
Daylight wherever the architecture allows, layered with warm, dimmable lighting everywhere else.
Wood, soft textiles, and grounded earth tones in place of plastic and clinical white.
Acoustic materials keep the room quiet, so a sensitive child is never asked to filter noise.
Beneath the calm, every piece is professional therapeutic equipment, safety-tested and purpose-built.
Open sightlines and a place for everything — visual calm that keeps the nervous system at ease.
Generous time between families, so no child is rushed and no session feels like a conveyor belt.
Parents often pause at the door. Then their shoulders drop, and the child runs in. That's the space doing exactly what it was designed to do.
Book an evaluation and experience the space firsthand — and watch what happens when your child walks through the door.