Skip to content

Trevor Linden takes over Burnaby site from struggling Fitness World

Vancouver Canucks legend Trevor Linden is moving his fitness franchise into North Burnaby. Club 16 Trevor Linden Fitness has announced the opening of its first North Burnaby location at 4199 Lougheed Hwy. in the Brentwood area.
trevor linden
Former Vancouver Canuck Trevor Linden stands in his Davie Street Orangetheory Fitness gym. Photo Rob Kruyt/Business in Vancouver

Vancouver Canucks legend Trevor Linden is moving his fitness franchise into North Burnaby.

Club 16 Trevor Linden Fitness has announced the opening of its first North Burnaby location at 4199 Lougheed Hwy. in the Brentwood area.

The gym franchise operates a facility in the Highgate area of South Burnaby.

The new Club 16 is set to open in September, according to the company’s website.

The North Burnaby location was the former site of Steve Nash Fitness World, which has been undergoing financial and legal problems during the past few months.

"Opportunity comes knocking and you get offers that you can’t refuse," Chuck Lawson, president and CEO of Club16, told Business in Vancouver in an interview about opening new locations in Burnaby and Richmond.

Lawson said the company was approached by quite a few landlords of Steve Nash Fitness locations, all of which have been closed since mid-March. SNFW Fitness B.C. Ltd. – which operated more than two dozen fitness locations under Steve Nash, Crunch Fitness and UFC Gym brands – has not paid rent for any of its 32 leased locations as of April, when it began insolvency proceedings under federal bankruptcy and insolvency legislation.

Even as it expands, Lawson says navigating the pandemic and a new re-opening regime has been a "colossal struggle" for the company, which laid off a lot of employees prior to re-opening, and hasn't been able to hire them all back. Costs – for cleaning, for 55-gallon drums of hand sanitizer – are higher, and capacity in a gym at any given time is limited.

"Just trying to get to normal now is the goal," Lawson said, adding that despite COVID-19-related challenges, the two location deals made a lot of sense for Club16. 

"We were not in either of those marketplaces and we wanted to be in those marketplaces. It just made sense. Sometimes someone else’s problems become your blessings," he explained, adding that the company will save on renovation costs by not having to turn either location into a fitness facility. 

“There’s some advantages to us jumping in there and taking them.”

Last month, it was announced that a group of investors had made a successful bid for SNFW Fitness, which sought creditor protection in early April. It has also been announced that the company's new ownership plans on dropping the name of Canadian basketball star Steve Nash from its brand. 

The company is reportedly negotiating with landlords to re-open certain locations under a new Fitness World banner.

The group of investors has not yet been publicly identified, and the deal to acquire SNFW Fitness has not yet been approved in court.

The company said in a June 19 news release that it plans to re-open select locations in the first week of July.

With files from Hayley Woodin