Gym Layout Designer
Draw your room, calculate your flooring, add equipment, and request a quote — all in one free tool.
Plan your gym, weight room, or fitness center with our free online layout designer. Draw your space to scale, choose from 215+ pieces of commercial strength equipment, select rubber flooring by the square foot, and request a quote — no account required. Whether you're outfitting a home garage gym, a high school weight room, or a full commercial facility, this tool helps you visualize your layout before you buy.
Your Layouts
Click on a layout below to see a breakdown
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Gym Layout Designer Help & Guide
Search our knowledge base or browse by category to learn how to use every feature of the Gym Layout Designer.
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Getting Started
The Gym Layout Designer is a free, browser-based tool that lets you draw your gym or fitness space to scale, add flooring products, place equipment, and generate a detailed material list. It works entirely in your browser — no downloads or sign-ups required. You can use it to plan a home gym, commercial fitness center, CrossFit box, or any athletic facility.
Scroll to the top of this page — the designer loads automatically above this knowledge base section. No installation or account creation is needed. The designer runs directly in your web browser on both desktop and mobile devices.
The designer works in all modern browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge on both desktop and mobile. For the best experience, we recommend using an up-to-date version of Chrome or Edge on a desktop or laptop computer. The larger screen gives you more room to work with detailed layouts.
Yes. The designer has a fully mobile-optimized interface with touch controls. On phones, you get a compact toolbar and a joystick D-pad for precise cursor placement. Pinch to zoom, drag to pan, and use the checkmark button to confirm actions. While the designer works great on mobile, a desktop or laptop is recommended for complex layouts since you have more screen space to work with.
The designer guides you through a step-by-step workflow: (1) Draw Space — sketch your room perimeter, add doors, and define interior zones. (2) Add Flooring — browse our flooring catalog and paint products directly onto your rooms. (3) Add Equipment — search our equipment library and place items on your layout. (4) Customize — personalize your equipment's frame and upholstery colors to match your brand. (5) Get a Quote — generate a material summary and request pricing from our team.
No. The designer is completely free and requires no account. Your designs are saved locally in your browser. You can also export your designs as files or share them via a link to access them on other devices.
The main area is a canvas with a grid background where you draw and arrange your layout. Along the top is a step navigation bar that guides you through the design process. On the right side is a vertical toolbar with drawing tools like Select, Draw, Hand (pan), Eraser, and more. On the left side are utility buttons for settings, saved designs, and help. A status bar at the bottom gives you contextual instructions as you work.
Open the Settings panel by clicking the gear icon on the left side of the canvas. Under the Theme section, you can toggle between Light and Dark mode. Your preference is saved automatically and will be remembered the next time you visit.
Yes. Open Settings and choose from four unit options: Feet + Inches (e.g., 12' 6"), Feet (e.g., 12.50 ft), Inches (e.g., 150.0 in), or Meters (e.g., 3.81 m). All wall dimensions, area calculations, and material summaries will update to reflect your chosen unit.
The designer supports many keyboard shortcuts for faster workflows. Tools: S for Select, D for Draw, H for Hand (pan), E for Eraser, M for Measure, O for Objects, B for Trace Blueprint, Z for Zoom, and F for Floor/Turf mode. Actions: Ctrl+Z to Undo, Ctrl+Shift+Z to Redo, Delete to remove selected items, Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V to copy and paste, Ctrl+G to group, ] and [ to send items to front or back, R to rotate flooring or view, F11 for fullscreen, and arrow keys to nudge items. Press T or click the help icon to see the full shortcuts reference inside the designer.
Yes, 100% free with no catch. You can draw rooms, add flooring, place equipment, export your designs, and request quotes without paying anything or entering a credit card. There are no premium tiers, no watermarks on exports, and no feature limits. The tool is provided by Blue Sky Fitness Supply as a resource to help you plan your space before purchasing flooring and equipment.
Most gym layout tools are either generic room planners that don't understand gym equipment or flooring, or they're locked to a single equipment brand. The Gym Layout Designer is purpose-built for gym planning with three things you won't find together anywhere else: a built-in flooring calculator that shows you exactly how many rolls or tiles you need, an equipment catalog with 215+ real products across 8 categories, and a one-click quote request for everything in your layout — flooring and equipment together.
Open the Settings panel (gear icon) to toggle eight display options on or off: Wall Dimensions (show measurement labels on walls), Space Labels (show room names on the canvas), Grid Lines (show the background grid), Hollow Walls (show walls as outlined instead of solid), Floor Overlay (show the flooring texture on rooms), Floor Overage (show trimmed material in red), Floor Seams (show seam lines between flooring strips), and Product Cards (show product info when clicking floored rooms). You can also switch between Standard and Large canvas sizes.
Yes. The designer autosaves your work to your browser's local storage as you make changes. You can see the last autosave timestamp in the My Designs panel (floppy disk icon). If you close your browser and come back, your latest design will still be there. You can also manually save at any time by clicking Save or by naming your design in the current design field. Keep in mind that designs are stored in your browser only — clearing your browser data will remove them. Use Export to save a backup file you can keep permanently.
Yes. Press F11 or click the Fullscreen button in the toolbar to expand the designer to fill your entire screen. This gives you maximum canvas space for detailed layouts. Press F11 again or Escape to exit fullscreen mode. Fullscreen is especially useful when working on large commercial layouts where you need to see the full floor plan at once.
Drawing Your Space
Select the Draw tool (D key or toolbar icon) and choose either Rectangle or Freehand mode. In Rectangle mode, click to place one corner, then click again to place the opposite corner — the room is created instantly. In Freehand mode, click to place individual wall points, and click near your starting point to close the shape. Each wall segment shows its length as you draw, and the grid helps you snap to precise measurements.
Rectangle mode is the fastest way to draw simple four-walled rooms — just click two opposite corners. Freehand mode lets you click to place each wall corner individually, which is perfect for L-shaped rooms, irregular spaces, or any layout that is not a simple rectangle. You can switch between modes at any time from the Draw tool popover.
Use Freehand drawing mode. Click to place each corner of your room one at a time, following the actual shape of your space. When you reach the last corner, click near your starting point and the room will close automatically. You can also hold Shift to constrain your lines to perfectly horizontal or vertical angles, which helps keep walls straight.
Open the Draw tool popover and select a door type — Single Door, Double Door, or Roller Door. Hover over any wall and you will see a preview of the door snapping into position. Click to set the hinge point, then move along the wall to set the door width. Click again to choose which direction the door swings. For roller doors, simply click to place — no swing direction is needed since they roll straight up.
Three door types are available. Single Door (default 36" wide) creates a standard hinged door with a swing arc. Double Door (default 72" wide) creates a pair of hinged doors that swing from both sides. Roller Door (default 120" wide) creates a wide opening without a swing arc, ideal for roll-up garage doors or loading areas. You can adjust the width of any door type after placing it.
Switch to the Select tool (S key) and click on a door to select it. You can then drag it along the wall to reposition it. To change the swing direction, double-click the door. To delete a door, select it and press Delete or Backspace. You can also adjust the door's width using the input field that appears when a door is selected.
The Subtract tool lets you cut out sections from an existing room — useful for creating alcoves, closets, or notches. Select the Draw tool, then switch to Subtract mode (the minus badge). Draw a shape that overlaps the area you want to remove. The overlapping area will be cut from the original room, and the room's outline will update automatically.
Dividing Walls are thick interior walls that physically split a room into separate spaces — each side becomes its own room with its own area calculation and flooring. Dividing Lines are thin dashed lines that create visual zones within the same room — useful when you want different flooring products in different areas of the same open space. Both must start and end on existing walls of a room.
Switch to the Select tool and click on a room. Blue handles will appear at every wall corner and along wall edges. Drag a corner to reshape the room, drag a wall edge to slide an entire wall (connected walls will stretch to follow), or drag a wall endpoint to move just that point. Wall dimensions update in real time as you drag, and the grid snaps your adjustments to precise measurements.
Hold the Shift key while drawing to lock your walls to perfectly horizontal or vertical angles. On mobile devices, tap the Shift toggle button in the toolbar to enable the same axis lock. This is especially helpful in Freehand mode to ensure your walls stay straight.
The designer uses adaptive grid snapping. When you are zoomed out, points snap to a 1-foot grid for quick rough layouts. When you zoom in closer, the grid automatically switches to a finer 1-inch grid for precise adjustments. You can toggle the grid visibility on or off in the Settings panel, but snapping remains active regardless to help you place walls accurately.
Click the Trace Blueprint button in the toolbar (or press B) to upload a floor plan photo or blueprint. After uploading, you will be asked to calibrate the scale — click two known points on the image and enter the real-world distance between them. You can also level (rotate) the image to align with the grid and adjust its opacity so you can trace over it. Draw your walls on top of the image, and when you are finished, you can hide or remove the background.
Click directly on a room's label text (e.g., "Space 1") on the canvas. An editable text field will appear. Type your new name — for example, "Weight Room" or "Cardio Area" — and press Enter or click away to save it. The new name will appear on the canvas and in the material summary below.
Simply draw another room on the canvas — there is no limit to how many rooms you can add. Each room is independent and gets its own name, area calculation, and flooring. You can draw rooms next to each other to represent adjacent spaces (like a weight room next to a cardio room), or draw them separately to plan different areas of a facility. Each room appears as its own card in the Your Layouts section below the canvas.
Switch to the Select tool (S key) and click on the room you want to remove. Press Delete or Backspace to delete it. You can also use the Eraser tool (E key) — click on a room to erase it. If you accidentally delete a room, press Ctrl+Z to undo immediately. Deleting a room also removes any flooring applied to it.
Yes. Use the Subtract tool to carve out columns, pillars, or any fixed structural features from your room. Draw a small rectangle or shape where the column stands, and the tool will cut it out of the room's floor area. This ensures your square footage calculation is accurate and helps you visualize obstacles when planning equipment placement. You can also draw a small separate room to represent a column if you want it to appear as a distinct object on the canvas.
Flooring
Navigate to Step 2 (Add Flooring) using the step bar at the top. A product panel will open showing all available flooring categories — Rubber Rolls, Turf, Tiles, Pavers, and more. Select a product and a color swatch, then click on any room in your layout to apply it. The room will display the actual flooring pattern, including roll strips, seam lines, and material texture. Click the same room again with the same product to remove the flooring.
The designer includes our flooring catalog organized by type: Rubber Rolls (various thicknesses and widths), Turf (for functional training areas), Tiles (interlocking options), and Pavers (for heavy-duty zones). Each product shows its width, thickness, a price range indicator ($–$$$), and available color swatches with actual texture previews. You can also toggle Uniform Roll Lengths to standardize how rolls are cut for your layout. Select a color to see it applied on your rooms.
Use Dividing Lines to split a room into separate zones without adding physical walls. Go back to Step 1, select the Draw tool, and choose "Dividing Line." Draw a line from one wall to another — this creates a visual boundary. Then in Step 2, each zone can receive its own flooring product and color independently. This is great for spaces that have a rubber roll area next to a turf section.
There are two ways. You can click a floored room with the same product and color already selected, and it will toggle off. Or you can use the Floor Eraser — click the eraser button in the flooring toolbar, then click any room to remove its flooring. You can also select floored rooms with the Select tool and press Delete.
When flooring is applied, the designer shows the actual roll or tile layout pattern on your room. For rubber rolls and turf, you will see individual strips laid side by side with seam lines between them. The red-tinted edges represent overage — the extra material at the walls that gets trimmed during installation. The material texture overlay shows the actual color and pattern of the product. You can toggle the overlay, seams, and overage display on or off in Settings.
Click the compass button in the flooring toolbar (or press R) to open the rotation compass. Select the room you want to adjust, then use the dial or the preset angle buttons (0, 45, 90, or 135 degrees) to rotate the flooring direction. This changes which direction the rolls or tiles are laid, which can affect the number of seams and the total material needed. Use the arrow buttons on the compass to cycle between different floored rooms.
The Layout Details panel below the canvas shows a material summary for each product and color you have applied. It calculates the total square footage of flooring needed, broken down by room. This summary updates in real time as you add, remove, or rotate flooring. When you are ready, proceed to Step 5 to generate a formal quote request with purchase quantities.
The red-tinted areas represent material overage — the extra flooring that extends beyond your room walls. During installation, this excess material is trimmed to fit perfectly. The designer accounts for this overage (about 6 inches per strip) to give you an accurate total material estimate. You can hide the overage display in Settings if you prefer a cleaner view.
Yes. Simply select a different product or color in the flooring panel, then click the room you want to update. The new flooring will replace the old one in a single click. There is no need to remove the existing flooring first.
The designer calculates it for you automatically. After drawing your room, switch to the flooring step, select a product (rubber rolls, interlocking tiles, or pavers), and click your room to apply it. The material summary shows the exact square footage, number of rolls or tiles, and seam layout. It accounts for roll width and room shape so you get accurate coverage — no separate calculator or spreadsheet needed.
For most weight rooms, 8mm rubber interlocking tiles or rolled rubber flooring are the go-to options. Tiles are easier to install and replace individually if damaged. Rolled rubber gives you fewer seams and a cleaner look, and comes in thicknesses from 8mm to 14.5mm+ for heavier use. Rubber pavers work well for outdoor or high-impact zones. You can preview all of these in the designer — apply different products to see how they look, then compare pricing when you request a quote.
The designer includes built-in optimization tools to reduce flooring waste. After applying flooring to a room, open the rotation compass and click the optimize button — it automatically finds the roll angle that produces the least material overage for that zone. You can also optimize all rooms at once, which finds the angle combination with the least combined waste across your entire layout. Try both horizontal and vertical orientations using the preset buttons, and compare the overage shown in the material summary. Even a small angle change can save a full roll of material on large rooms.
When you expand a flooring product in the panel, you will see a Uniform Roll Lengths toggle. When enabled, the designer cuts all rolls to the same length rather than varying them to minimize waste. This makes installation easier since every strip is identical, but it may use slightly more material. When disabled (the default), the designer optimizes each strip individually for minimum waste. Toggle it on if you prefer simpler installation, or leave it off if minimizing material cost is the priority.
Flooring thickness depends on the type of training in each zone. For general cardio areas and machine sections, 8mm rubber flooring provides adequate protection and cushioning. For free weight areas and moderate lifting, 10mm to 12mm is recommended. For Olympic lifting and heavy deadlifts where weights are regularly dropped, 14.5mm or thicker provides the best impact absorption and subfloor protection. The designer shows the thickness of each product in the flooring panel, so you can match the right product to each zone in your layout.
Rubber rolls are long continuous sheets (typically 4 feet wide) that unroll across your floor. They produce fewer seams and a smoother surface, making them ideal for large open areas like weight rooms and cardio zones. Interlocking tiles are modular squares that snap together without adhesive. Tiles are easier to install, replace individually if damaged, and transport — great for home gyms, garage gyms, and spaces where you might move the flooring later. The designer lets you apply both types to different zones in the same layout so you can compare how each looks and calculate exact material quantities for both.
Gym flooring costs vary by type and thickness. As a general range, rubber interlocking tiles start around $1.50–$3.00 per square foot, rolled rubber typically runs $2.00–$5.00 per square foot depending on thickness, and specialty products like turf or heavy-duty pavers can range higher. The designer shows a relative price indicator ($–$$$) for each product in the flooring panel so you can compare options at a glance. For exact pricing, add your flooring to the layout, then use Get a Quote (Step 5) to request current pricing based on your specific quantities and color selections.
In most cases, rubber gym flooring can be installed directly on a clean, flat concrete or plywood subfloor without additional underlayment. Rubber rolls are heavy enough to stay in place without adhesive in many installations. For basements or areas with moisture concerns, a vapor barrier underneath is recommended. Interlocking tiles can sit directly on concrete or hard flooring. The designer focuses on layout and material quantities — for specific installation guidance on your subfloor type, contact our team when you request a quote and we can advise on the best approach for your space.
Equipment
Navigate to Step 3 (Add Equipment) and the equipment panel will open. Browse by category or use the search bar to find specific items by name or SKU. Click on a product swatch to select it — a ghost preview will follow your cursor on the canvas. Click to place the item. If you want to place multiple copies of the same item, hold Shift and click to stamp them rapidly.
The equipment library includes over 215 items across eight categories: Weight Stack Machines, Plate Loaded, Racks & Cages, Benches, Storage, Body Weight & Core, Lifting Platforms, and Other Strength. Each item is rendered to scale based on its real-world dimensions. You can search for any item by name using the search bar at the top of the equipment panel, or filter by brand.
Switch to the Select tool and click on any equipment item to select it. Drag it to move it to a new position. Use the rotation handle that appears above the item to rotate it. Press Delete or Backspace to remove it. You can also use arrow keys to nudge equipment by 1 inch at a time (or hold Shift for 1-foot nudges). The designer will warn you if you try to move equipment into a wall.
Equipment items cannot be resized because they are rendered to their real-world dimensions. This ensures your layout accurately represents the physical space each item will occupy. If you need a different size, look for alternative product variants in the equipment catalog.
Select the item with the Select tool, then press Ctrl+C (Cmd+C on Mac) to copy it. Press Ctrl+V (Cmd+V) to paste — a preview will follow your cursor so you can choose exactly where to place the copy. Click to confirm the placement. The pasted item will keep the same rotation angle as the original.
Many equipment items support custom brand colors — you can change the powder coat color (frame) and upholstery color (pads) to match your gym's look. Navigate to Step 4 (Customize) after placing equipment, or click the palette button in the equipment toolbar. Choose from powder coat swatches and upholstery options. Colors are applied per manufacturer, so all equipment from the same brand will share your chosen colors. This is a great way to visualize how equipment will look with your gym's branding before you order.
Hold Shift and click individual items to add them to your selection. You can also use box selection — click on an empty area of the canvas, then click again to define the opposite corner of a selection rectangle. All items inside the box will be selected. Once selected, you can move, delete, copy, or group the items together.
Select multiple items, then press Ctrl+G (Cmd+G on Mac) or click the Group button in the toolbar to group them. Grouped items move and rotate together as a single unit. To break a group apart, select it and press Ctrl+Shift+G (Cmd+Shift+G) or click the Ungroup button.
Select an item and press the ] key (right bracket) to send it to the front, or the [ key (left bracket) to send it to the back. You can also use the Send to Front and Send to Back buttons in the toolbar. This is useful when items overlap and you want to control which one is displayed on top.
A treadmill typically needs a footprint of about 7 feet long by 3 feet wide, plus at least 6 feet of clearance behind it for safety (in case of a fall) and 1.5 to 2 feet on each side. An elliptical needs roughly 6 by 3 feet of floor space plus 2 feet of clearance all around. Stationary bikes are more compact at about 4 by 2 feet. Rowers need the most length — about 9 feet long by 4 feet wide when in use. The designer renders equipment to scale, so you will see the exact footprint of each machine when you place it. Use the Measure tool (M key) to verify clearances between machines.
In Step 3 (Add Equipment), use the search bar at the top of the equipment panel. Type the name of the item you are looking for — for example, "lat pulldown" or "squat rack" — and the list will filter in real time. You can also browse by category (Weight Stack Machines, Plate Loaded, Racks & Cages, Benches, Storage, Body Weight & Core, Lifting Platforms, Other Strength) or filter by brand using the brand tabs below the search bar.
The equipment catalog currently features items from Legend Fitness. If you need to represent equipment from another brand or a custom item, you can use a similarly sized catalog item as a placeholder — for example, use a comparable squat rack to represent a different brand's rack. The dimensions will be close enough for layout planning. When you request a quote, mention any substitutions in the notes and our team can adjust the quote to include the specific products you want.
Gym Types
Absolutely. The Gym Layout Designer works great for home gyms of any size. Draw your spare bedroom, basement, or dedicated fitness room to scale, then experiment with equipment placement to find the optimal arrangement. The flooring calculator shows you exactly how many tiles or rolls you need — no guesswork or overbuying. Many home gym builders use the tool to plan their layout before purchasing equipment and flooring together.
Yes — garage gyms are one of the most popular uses for the designer. Draw your garage dimensions (common sizes are 20x20, 20x24, or 24x24 feet), subtract space for storage or a parked car, then place racks, benches, and cardio equipment to see what fits. The flooring calculator is especially useful for garages since you'll want to know exactly how much rubber flooring to cover your lifting area versus leaving bare concrete for other uses.
Start by drawing your full facility to scale, including any columns, alcoves, or fixed features. Use the Subtract tool to carve out closets, bathrooms, or front desk areas. Then zone your space — place cardio equipment near windows, free weights on thicker rubber flooring, and group machines by muscle group. The material summary gives you accurate flooring quantities for quoting, and you can request a full quote for equipment and flooring when your layout is ready.
Yes, and it's especially well-suited for school and university weight rooms. Draw your room dimensions, then use the equipment catalog to place racks, platforms, benches, and machines with proper spacing. The tool helps athletic directors and coaches visualize how many stations fit safely in the available space. High school weight rooms commonly range from 1,500 to 3,000 square feet — the designer handles any size. When you're ready, request a quote for everything in your layout.
Definitely. CrossFit boxes need flexible open floor space for WODs plus dedicated areas for rigs, ropes, rowing machines, and storage. Draw your space, place your rig along a wall, then arrange equipment around the perimeter to keep the center open. The flooring calculator helps you figure out how much rubber flooring you need for the lifting area versus the workout floor. You can save multiple layout versions to compare configurations for class flow.
Yes. Senior living fitness rooms, apartment building gyms, and community wellness centers are a great fit for the designer. These spaces often prioritize accessibility, with wider pathways between equipment and a focus on machines, light free weights, and cardio. Draw your room, place equipment with generous spacing (typically 3-4 feet between machines), and use the flooring calculator to determine how much shock-absorbing rubber flooring you need.
It depends on your equipment and how many people will train at once. As a starting point: a single power rack station needs about 8x8 feet of floor space including the lifter's area. A small home gym with a rack, bench, and some dumbbells works in 10x10 to 12x12 feet. A school or commercial weight room typically needs 1,500 to 5,000+ square feet depending on the number of stations. Use the designer to draw your available space and place equipment — you'll quickly see what fits.
The station model is the most effective way to design a high school weight room. A "station" is a self-contained training area — typically 100 to 225 square feet — that includes a squat rack, a lifting platform, a bench, weight storage, bars, and bumper plates. When designed properly, a single station allows 2 to 4 athletes to perform over 100 different exercises within a 45- to 60-minute session. This is the opposite of scattering individual machines around the room. Use the designer to draw your room, place rack stations in rows, and see exactly how many fit with safe spacing.
A typical high school weight room can fit anywhere from 8 to 16 squat racks, depending on room dimensions and layout. Each rack station needs a footprint of roughly 10x10 to 15x15 feet including the lifter's area. For example, a 2,400 square foot room measuring 80x30 feet could fit about 8 racks along each long wall for 16 total — though doors, pillars, and ceiling obstructions may reduce that number. Use the designer to draw your room to scale and place racks along the walls — you'll see exactly how many fit with safe spacing before you buy anything.
A complete high school weight room — including squat racks, platforms, flooring, weights, accessories, shipping, and installation — typically costs between $50,000 and $500,000 or more depending on room size and equipment quality. On a per-square-foot basis, most projects fall between $40 and $120 per square foot, with the average landing around $55 per square foot for a fully outfitted room. The designer helps you plan your layout within your budget: place equipment, calculate your flooring needs, then request a quote to get exact pricing on everything in your design.
When planning a high school weight room, you should consider pillars and columns (which may block rack placement), door locations (which affect traffic flow and wall space), ceiling height (which determines whether tall racks with pull-up bars will fit), low-hanging lights or ductwork (which restrict what can go beneath them), and window placement. Even drinking fountain locations matter — you need clearance around them. A large, open rectangle is the easiest shape to work with, while rooms with curved walls or odd angles reduce usable floor space. Use the designer to draw your room shape, mark obstacles with the Subtract tool, and test different arrangements to find what works.
A high school weight room typically accommodates 2 to 4 athletes per squat rack station training at the same time. To find your total capacity, multiply the number of racks by the athletes per rack. For example, a room with 12 racks at 3 athletes each supports 36 athletes simultaneously. This number is critical — if your football team has 80 athletes but your weight room only supports 48, you'll need to split into multiple training periods. Use the designer to lay out your racks and count them visually so you can plan training rotations before committing to a layout.
For most high school weight rooms, squat racks are the better choice over machines. A single squat rack station with a platform and accessories lets 2 to 4 athletes perform over 100 exercises — including all Olympic lifts, power lifts, and accessory work — in the same 100- to 225-square-foot area. By contrast, each machine serves only one exercise for one person, forcing athletes to wander the room between sets. With limited space and 45- to 60-minute class periods, rack-based stations are far more efficient. Use the designer to compare both layouts in your room and see the difference for yourself.
Most existing high school weight rooms range from 1,500 to 2,500 square feet, though newer schools are building larger — 3,000, 4,000, or even 5,000 square feet is increasingly common in well-funded programs. The right size depends on how many athletes need to train simultaneously and what equipment you plan to include. A large square or rectangular room accommodates the most stations, while irregular shapes with curved walls or odd angles reduce usable space. If you're planning new construction or a renovation, use the designer to test different room dimensions and see how many stations and auxiliary equipment each size supports.
A compact squat rack typically needs about 55 by 68 inches of floor space, while a fully loaded rack with storage and attachments may require 80 by 69 inches or more. That difference adds up quickly across a full high school weight room — choosing a larger rack could mean fitting 10 racks instead of 14. Bigger equipment also needs more safety clearance so bars don't strike storage units or walls during lifts. Use the designer to place different rack options side by side and see the trade-off visually: fewer racks with more accessories each, or more racks with a leaner setup. It's the easiest way to compare configurations before committing to a purchase.
A middle school weight room is typically set up differently than a high school weight room because younger athletes are still developing coordination and strength. About half of middle school programs use squat rack stations similar to high schools, but the other half use one of three alternative approaches: a circuit of machines around the perimeter for easy rotation, an open floor with light dumbbells and bodyweight exercises like pushups and air squats, or a hybrid combining both. Common equipment for middle school fitness rooms includes resistance bands, medicine balls, light dumbbells, agility ladders, and jump ropes. Use the designer to experiment with arrangements — a machine circuit on the perimeter with an open bodyweight area in the center is a popular starting point.
Besides squat racks, a well-equipped weight room typically includes a stretching and warm-up zone, cardio equipment like bikes or rowers, strength machines for exercises the racks don't cover, a turf strip for sled pushes and speed and agility drills, and an open area for coaching demonstrations. In a high school weight room, squat rack stations go along the walls first, then the remaining floor space is filled with these secondary areas. Use the designer to zone your layout — place racks first, then fill the open area with secondary equipment. Save multiple versions to compare how different configurations use the space.
Yes. Yoga studios, Pilates rooms, and group fitness spaces all benefit from careful layout planning. Draw your studio to scale, then use Dividing Lines to zone the floor into class areas and storage. The flooring calculator is especially useful here — rubber or vinyl flooring needs to cover the full studio floor, and the designer shows you exactly how many rolls or tiles to order. Place storage racks, mirrors (using equipment items as placeholders), and any machines along the perimeter. Many studio owners design multiple room configurations and share them with contractors before buildout.
Absolutely. Personal training studios typically range from 400 to 1,500 square feet and need a versatile equipment mix in a compact footprint. Draw your space, then place a rack, a cable machine, a bench, and a functional training area. The designer lets you experiment with different arrangements to maximize usable floor space — for example, placing the rack against a wall and keeping the center open for movement exercises. Use the flooring tool to see exactly how much rubber flooring you need, then request a quote for the complete package.
Yes. MMA gyms, boxing studios, and martial arts dojos combine open mat space with strength and conditioning zones. Draw your full facility, then use Dividing Lines to separate the mat area from the weight room and cardio sections. Apply different flooring to each zone — for example, rubber rolls for the weight area and a separate product for the training floor. The designer helps you visualize the full space, calculate flooring for each zone, and place heavy bags, racks, and conditioning equipment around the perimeter.
Yes — hotel gyms, apartment fitness rooms, and condo building amenity spaces are a great use case. These rooms are often 300 to 1,000 square feet and need to serve a wide range of guests with limited equipment. Draw your room, place a mix of cardio machines (treadmills, bikes, ellipticals) and a few strength items (a cable machine, dumbbells, a bench). Keep pathways wide for accessibility. The flooring calculator helps property managers order the exact amount of rubber flooring needed, and the quote tool lets you price the entire room in one request.
Basements are one of the most popular locations for home gyms. Draw your basement dimensions including any support columns, stairways, or utility areas using the Subtract tool to carve out obstacles. Before buying a tall squat rack with a pull-up bar, check your ceiling height — basements often have 7- to 8-foot ceilings, which limits rack options. Place your equipment, add rubber flooring (which also protects basement floors from moisture and weight), and use the material summary to get exact quantities. Many basement gym builders save their designer layout to share with contractors during renovation planning.
Yes — fire stations, military bases, and public safety facilities often need compact, high-intensity fitness rooms. These spaces typically range from 500 to 2,000 square feet and emphasize functional training equipment: squat racks, cable machines, rowers, heavy bags, and open floor space for bodyweight circuits. Draw your room, subtract any fixed obstacles like lockers or utility closets, then arrange equipment for circuit-style training. Use dividing lines to zone strength and cardio areas with different flooring. When your layout is ready, request a quote for the full equipment and flooring package.
Yes. Physical therapy clinics and sports rehab facilities need carefully planned layouts with wide pathways between equipment for patient mobility. Draw your clinic space, carve out treatment rooms or offices with the Subtract tool, and place cable machines, benches, and functional training equipment in the main gym area. Keep a minimum of 4 feet between machines for wheelchair and walker access. Use the flooring tool to plan rubber flooring throughout — it provides the shock absorption and slip resistance that clinical settings require. Share your layout with contractors or landlords when planning your buildout.
Absolutely. Churches, YMCAs, and community centers often have multipurpose rooms that double as fitness spaces. Draw your room dimensions, then plan equipment along the perimeter to keep the center open for group activities. The designer helps you figure out exactly how much rubber flooring to cover the fitness area versus leaving the rest of the floor as-is. Many community gyms focus on accessible equipment like machines, light free weights, and cardio — use the equipment catalog to place these and see what fits. Save multiple layout versions to present to your building committee or board.
Yes. Draw your patio, deck, or outdoor training area to scale just like an indoor room. Place racks, functional training equipment, and heavy bags to visualize your outdoor layout. For outdoor installations, rubber pavers are the best flooring choice — they are designed to withstand weather and heavy use. The designer calculates how many pavers you need based on your area dimensions. Whether you are building a backyard gym, a rooftop fitness space, or an outdoor training zone at a facility, the tool helps you plan equipment placement and flooring before purchasing.
For most gym equipment, a minimum ceiling height of 9 feet is recommended. Squat racks with pull-up bars typically need 8 to 9 feet of clearance. If athletes will do overhead presses while standing on a platform, you may need 10 to 12 feet. Basements and garages often have 7- to 8-foot ceilings, which can work but limits rack height options — choose a shorter rack or one without a pull-up bar. Cable crossover machines and functional trainers usually fit under 8-foot ceilings. While the designer works in 2D and does not measure ceiling height, keep these numbers in mind when choosing equipment for your layout.
Saving & Exporting
Your design is auto-saved to your browser every 30 seconds and after every action. You will see an "Auto-saved" indicator at the bottom of the canvas. To save a named version, click the designs icon on the left panel to open the Designs drawer, give your design a name, and click Save. You can create multiple named designs and switch between them.
Designs are saved to your browser's local storage on the device you are using. This means they persist between sessions on the same browser, but they are not synced across devices. If you clear your browser data or use a different device, your saved designs will not be available. To keep a permanent backup, use the Export feature to download your design as a file, or use the Share link feature to create a URL you can open anywhere.
Open the Designs drawer from the left panel. You will see a list of all your saved designs sorted by newest first, with the active design highlighted. Click Load on any design to switch to it, or click New to start a blank canvas (you will be prompted to save unsaved work first). You can rename a design by clicking on its name, and delete designs you no longer need.
In the Designs drawer, click the Export button to download your design as a JSON file. This file contains your complete layout — all rooms, doors, equipment, flooring, and settings. You can save this file anywhere on your computer as a backup. To restore a design from a file, click Import and select the JSON file.
Open the Designs drawer and click Import. Select a previously exported JSON file from your computer. The designer will validate the file and create a new named design from it. Your existing designs are not affected — the imported design is added alongside them.
When your layout is ready, navigate to Step 5 (Get a Quote). The designer will generate per-room images, a material summary with purchase quantities, and a complete equipment list. This information is packaged into a quote request that our team will review and respond to with pricing. Make sure you have added all the flooring and equipment you need before requesting a quote.
Press Ctrl+Z (Cmd+Z on Mac) to undo your last action, or Ctrl+Y (Cmd+Y) to redo. The designer stores up to 50 undo steps, so you can freely experiment without worrying about losing your work. On mobile, use the dedicated Undo and Redo buttons on the left side of the screen.
Once your layout is ready, click "Get a Quote" (Step 5 in the step bar). The tool compiles everything in your design — room dimensions, flooring quantities, and all placed equipment — into a detailed quote request. Blue Sky Fitness Supply reviews your layout and sends you a custom quote for everything you need. It is the fastest way to get accurate pricing because your exact dimensions and product selections are already included. Note: Step 5 becomes available after you have added flooring or equipment to your layout.
Step 4 (Customize) lets you personalize the look of your equipment by changing frame (powder coat) and pad (upholstery) colors. This step becomes available after you place equipment on your layout. Choose colors that match your gym's branding — for example, your school colors for a weight room or your logo colors for a commercial facility. The color selections carry over into your quote request so the manufacturer knows exactly what finish you want. If you do not need custom colors, you can skip this step and go directly to Get a Quote.
Design Tips
The most common mistakes are: not leaving enough space between equipment (aim for at least 3 feet of clearance on all sides), placing heavy equipment like squat racks against thin interior walls instead of exterior walls, blocking doorways with equipment, and forgetting to account for the full range of motion on machines like cable crossovers or lat pulldowns. Use the designer's real-scale equipment to spot these issues before installation day.
A good rule of thumb is to leave at least 3 feet (36 inches) of clear space on all sides of each piece of equipment. For items with moving parts — like treadmills, rowing machines, or cable machines — plan for 4 to 6 feet of clearance in the direction of movement. Walking aisles between rows of equipment should be at least 4 feet wide to allow comfortable traffic flow.
Plan clear pathways from every entrance to each zone of your gym. Avoid creating dead ends where members have to backtrack. Place cardio equipment near the entrance since it is the most popular category and creates an inviting first impression. Group similar equipment together — all free weights in one area, all machines in another, all functional training in a dedicated zone. Keep the path from the entrance to the locker rooms clear and obvious.
For small spaces, prioritize versatile equipment that serves multiple exercises — like a half rack with a pull-up bar, an adjustable bench, and a set of dumbbells. Place your largest piece of equipment first and build the layout around it. Use wall-mounted storage to keep the floor clear. Make sure doors can open fully without hitting equipment, and remember to leave room for stretching and warm-up exercises.
Start with an accurate floor plan — use the background image tracing feature to upload an architect's blueprint. Define distinct zones for cardio, strength, functional training, stretching, and group exercise. Use dividing lines to separate zones that will have different flooring. Plan wider aisles (5-6 feet) for high-traffic commercial spaces. Place your heaviest equipment (squat racks, platforms) on ground floors or against load-bearing walls. Leave room for future expansion.
The best flooring depends on the activity. Rubber rolls (3/8" to 1/2") are ideal for weight rooms and general strength areas — they absorb impact and protect subfloors. Thicker rubber (3/4" to 1") is recommended under heavy equipment like squat racks and deadlift platforms. Turf is great for functional training zones where you do sled pushes, prowler work, and agility drills. Vinyl-topped rolls work well for cardio and group fitness areas where a smoother, easier-to-clean surface is preferred.
Select the Measure tool (M key) and click two points on the canvas. The designer will display the exact distance between them in your current unit. This is useful for checking clearance between equipment, verifying room dimensions, or planning aisle widths. The measurement follows the grid snapping, so you get precise results.
Use your mouse scroll wheel to zoom in and out — the zoom centers on your cursor position. Press H or select the Hand tool to enter pan mode and drag the canvas around. You can also middle-click drag or right-click drag to pan at any time without switching tools. The Fit to View button (in the zoom popover) auto-zooms to show your entire layout. On mobile, pinch to zoom and drag with one finger to pan.
Ensure all aisles are at least 44 inches wide to accommodate wheelchair access (ADA guidelines). Place accessible equipment like recumbent bikes and adjustable cable machines along main pathways. Avoid creating narrow choke points between large machines. Consider placing a clear area near the entrance for wheelchair users to navigate comfortably, and ensure door openings are at least 36 inches wide.
The best gym layouts organize space into purpose-built zones. Common zones include: a free weight area (racks, benches, platforms) on thick rubber flooring near walls, a cardio section (treadmills, bikes, rowers) near windows or the entrance, a machine area (weight stacks, cable machines) grouped by muscle group, a functional training zone (turf, sleds, open space) in the center or along a wall, and a stretching and warm-up area near the entrance. In the designer, use Dividing Lines to separate zones visually, apply different flooring to each zone, and place equipment within its designated area. This creates natural traffic flow and prevents congestion.
Press M or click the Measure tool in the toolbar. Click any point on the canvas to start a measurement, then move your cursor to the second point — you will see the distance displayed in real time. Click to set the endpoint. This is useful for verifying clearance between equipment (recommended 3 to 4 feet minimum), checking aisle widths for accessibility, or confirming that a piece of equipment will fit in a specific gap. The measurement updates live in your chosen unit (feet, inches, or meters).
Below the designer canvas, the Your Layouts section shows a summary card for each room in your design. Each card displays the room name, a thumbnail preview, total square footage, and wall perimeter. Click on a room card to see a detailed breakdown of its flooring materials and quantities. This section updates in real time as you draw rooms, rename spaces, or apply flooring — it is the quickest way to see all your room dimensions and material needs at a glance without leaving the canvas.
A 1,000-square-foot gym can comfortably fit a full strength training area and a small functional zone. A proven layout divides the space into three areas: a strength zone (about 500 sq ft) with 3 to 4 squat racks or half racks along one wall, a free-weight zone (about 300 sq ft) with dumbbells, benches, and a lifting platform, and a stretching or cardio zone (about 200 sq ft) near the entrance. Place heavy racks against load-bearing walls, keep a 4-foot walkway down the center, and position mirrors on the wall opposite the racks. Use the designer's Measure tool (M) to verify clearances and the Your Layouts section to confirm your total square footage.
For a home gym or small facility, start with the essentials that offer the most exercise variety per dollar: a power rack or squat stand, an Olympic barbell and weight plates, a flat/incline bench, and rubber flooring. These four items support hundreds of exercises — squats, bench press, deadlifts, overhead press, rows, and more. After that, add dumbbells, a pull-up bar (many racks include one), and a cable machine or functional trainer. Use the designer to place these items first and see how much room remains before investing in specialty machines. The equipment catalog has over 215 items, so you can experiment with different configurations before committing to a purchase.
A multi-sport training facility typically needs distinct zones: a turf area for speed, agility, and sport-specific drills (minimum 20 × 40 feet for a sprint lane), a strength area with racks and platforms, and an open functional training area for plyometrics and bodyweight work. Use the designer's multiple-room feature to separate each zone — draw the turf area as one room with turf flooring, the weight room with rubber tiles, and so on. This lets you see each zone's square footage independently in the Your Layouts section. Place the turf area along the longest wall for maximum sprint distance, and keep strength equipment away from the agility zone to prevent collisions.
Troubleshooting
If the designer feels sluggish, try these steps: turn off the floor material overlay in Settings (it is the most visually intensive feature), close other browser tabs to free up memory, make sure your browser is up to date, and try using Chrome or Edge for the best performance. Very complex layouts with many rooms and hundreds of equipment items may run slower on older devices — consider simplifying your layout or working on a more powerful computer.
Designs are stored in your browser's local storage. If your design is gone, it may have been lost due to clearing browser data, using a different browser, or switching to a private/incognito window. Check the Designs drawer — your design may have been auto-saved under a different slot. If your canvas appears empty but your designs are listed, try clicking Load on the design you want. To prevent future loss, regularly export your designs as JSON files or use the Share link feature to create a backup URL.
In Freehand mode, you need to click near your starting point to close the room. Make sure you are zoomed in enough to accurately click on the first point — a green highlight will appear when you are close enough to snap to it. If you are still having trouble, try zooming in closer, or switch to Rectangle mode for simple four-walled rooms. You can also press Escape to cancel the current shape and start over.
The designer prevents you from placing equipment that overlaps with walls. If you see the equipment preview turn red, it means the item would intersect a wall boundary. Try moving it further away from the wall, or rotate it so it fits within the available space. The status bar at the bottom of the canvas will show an error message explaining why placement is blocked.
Check your unit settings — the designer supports Feet + Inches, Feet, Inches, and Meters. If the numbers look unexpected, you may have the wrong unit selected. Open Settings and verify the unit matches what you expect. If you are tracing over a background image, double-check that the calibration was done correctly — recalibrate by clicking two known points and entering the correct distance between them.
Yes. Press Ctrl+Z (Cmd+Z on Mac) immediately to undo the deletion. The designer keeps up to 50 undo steps, so even if you have made several changes since the deletion, you can likely undo your way back. On mobile, tap the Undo button on the left side of the screen.
Make sure you are using the joystick D-pad to move the cursor and the checkmark button to confirm actions — on mobile, dragging on the canvas pans the view rather than drawing. If the toolbar buttons are not responding, try refreshing the page. Also ensure you are not in a private browsing mode that might restrict local storage, which is needed for auto-save functionality.
You have two options. To clear the current design, open Settings and click "Clear All" — this removes all rooms, equipment, and flooring from the current canvas but keeps the design slot. To create an entirely new design, open the Designs drawer and click "New" — you will be prompted to save your current work first, and then a fresh blank canvas will be created as a separate design slot.
Yes. The simplest way to print your gym layout is to use your browser's built-in print function (Ctrl + P on Windows or Cmd + P on Mac). For the best result, enter Fullscreen mode first (F11), zoom to fit your entire layout on screen using Fit to View, then print. Set the orientation to landscape for wider rooms. You can also choose "Save as PDF" in the print dialog to create a digital file you can email to contractors, architects, or team members.
The Gym Layout Designer requires an internet connection to load initially because it runs in your web browser. However, once the page is fully loaded, most features — drawing rooms, placing equipment, adding flooring, and saving designs to your browser — work without an active connection. The features that do require internet are sharing your design via link or email and requesting a quote. For the most reliable experience, make sure you have a stable connection when you first open the tool, and export your design as a JSON file periodically as a local backup.