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To embrace its commitment to student wellness, Brown must expand its recreational facilities

If you have ever entered the Nelson Fitness Center鈥檚 loft, the following scene might sound familiar: You walk into the gym only to find every weight machine in use as students loiter to wait their turn. The free weight area is crammed with more people than there are workout mats to accommodate them and racks are stripped entirely of low and medium-weight dumbbells. The overcrowding and inaccessibility of basic equipment at the Nelson drew complaints from students early this semester that faded into the background as the weeks have gone by. But while the discourse fades, the problems at the Nelson have never really abated. As the undergraduate population at Brown 鈥済radually expands,鈥 the truth of the matter becomes unavoidable: We simply do not have enough gym space on campus. Beyond performatively voicing its commitment to student health, Brown needs to expand its recreational spaces and make fitness more accessible for its student population.聽

For a university of its size, Brown offers surprisingly few spaces on campus where students can consistently get a workout in: The 10,000-square-foot fitness loft in the Nelson Fitness Center, a gym in Graduate Center E that holds a handful of treadmills and ellipticals and a former gym space in Keeney Quadrangle, which now holds yoga classes. While Brown boasts a number of for athletics, many of these spaces are not available or intended for the general student population 鈥 or they鈥檙e sport-specific complexes that don鈥檛 contain basic equipment like treadmills and weights for day-to-day workouts.聽

The inadequacy of Brown鈥檚 fitness options for its and 2,689 graduate students becomes particularly evident when compared to the recreational facilities offered by other institutions. Take Colby College, a liberal arts college that offers three floors of weight training and cardio equipment in its for an undergraduate population of just over 2,200 鈥斅爓ell under half of Brown鈥檚. Likewise, Dartmouth鈥檚 16,000-square-foot offers over 100 machines and three different dumbbell areas. And Penn鈥檚 supplement an 8,000-square-foot weight room with a 40-foot climbing wall and two more floors of weights and cardio equipment. Brown isn鈥檛 up to the standard of its peers on an issue that goes beyond working out alone: Regular exercise helps college students sleep, stress and overall mental health. Brown鈥檚 of 鈥渇ostering the health and well-being of every student鈥 cannot be met in full until it offers recreational facilities that match the needs of its campus population.

Some initiatives to address the overcrowding at the Nelson are already underway. In response to student complaints at the beginning of the spring semester, the Undergraduate Council of Students worked with administrators to introduce an occupancy tracker. A March 24 UCS email also announced a pilot program to extend Fitness Loft hours through 11 p.m. from Mondays to Thursdays, with the hopes of eventually keeping the gym open until midnight. But while promising, these solutions show the incomplete scope of UCS鈥檚 power to improve overcrowding, an administrative-level issue that has more to do with space than time. Students shouldn't have to micromanage their schedules and check an app in order to work out. Nor should they have to wait until 10:30 p.m. to hope for a chance at using a squat rack. Exercise should be about聽relieving stress instead of causing it through complicated planning. Brown鈥檚 fitness and wellness manager has noted that Brown Recreation is 鈥渆xploring existing spaces within the Nelson Fitness Center to create additional opportunities for training.鈥 But there are no concrete public plans to initiate a large-scale expansion or to introduce new fitness options in other areas around campus.

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Reopening the Keeney Quad gym as is also a well-intentioned but misinformed step to make fitness more accessible on campus. Although having a dedicated location for yoga is admirable, it should not come at the expense of a broader, multi-use facility in an area of campus that currently lacks one. Yoga requires space but little equipment, meaning there are multiple places 鈥斅爏uch as the multipurpose room in Sternlicht Commons 鈥 where classes could be held on a more regular basis. On the other hand, the Keeney Quad gym is one of the few locations where heavier equipment could be stored and used permanently.聽

The changes at the Nelson might shift surface-level conditions, but not the underlying issues concerning the amount of space and equipment available. Brown is dancing around the solution that will produce lasting improvements: opening new fitness spaces on a campus that sorely needs them. This might entail converting existing properties or building an entirely new facility altogether, neither of which would be an easy task. Brown would have to embrace the costly, difficult and time-intensive project of renovating or acquiring new space. But the expenditure is certainly worth it. After Purdue University spent $98 million on , use of the facilities increased and many students saw improved academic performance. If Brown made a similar investment, it could see a similar increase in the number of students who choose to use its gyms and make fitness a regular part of their routine. A major investment in recreational space and resources would represent a major investment in the health and well-being of Brown students 鈥 one that is long overdue.

Editorials are written by The Herald鈥檚 editorial page board and aim to contribute informed opinions to campus debates while remaining mindful of the group鈥檚 past stances. The editorial page board and its views are separate from The Herald鈥檚 newsroom and the 133rd Editorial Board, which leads the paper. This editorial was written by the editorial page board鈥檚 editor Kate Waisel 鈥24 and members Irene Chou 鈥23, Yasmeen Gaber 鈥23, Tom Li 鈥26, Jackson McGough 鈥23, Alissa Simon 鈥25 and Yael Wellisch 鈥26.

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