The 16,000-square-foot concept was created by entrepreneur Luca Maggiora, who acquired Tramp in late 2023, and represents an investment of approximately £10 million.
Luxury Wellness Club Opens In Mayfair
Tramp Health is located beside the new Rosewood hotel within the former US Embassy building on Grosvenor Square.
The club combines fitness, recovery, medical diagnostics, aesthetics, wellness and hospitality under one membership-based concept.
Maggiora described the project as the opposite of the traditional Tramp nightclub experience, positioning it instead around longevity, wellbeing and community.
Membership Model Targets High-End Market
Existing Tramp members can access Tramp Health for an additional £390 per month on top of annual club dues of £2,000.
New members face a stricter admissions process involving interviews, with successful applicants paying £10,000 annually plus a £5,000 joining fee.
The club plans to limit membership to 1,200 people.
Fitness Facilities Include Pilates And Mindfulness Spaces
The fitness offering includes a 3,000-square-foot gym equipped with machines and training systems from brands including Technogym, Eleiko, Panatta, Watson, Hammer Strength and Precor.
The facility also includes a Pilates studio with 15 reformers, a personal training studio and dedicated hot yoga and mindfulness spaces.
Mindfulness programming will feature activities such as meditation, breathwork and sound healing sessions.
Recovery And Longevity Focus Expands Offering
Recovery amenities include a 15-person steam room, cold plunge pools, a 20-person sauna and hyperbaric oxygen therapy facilities.
The club additionally offers physiotherapy, traditional Chinese medicine, mobility training and aesthetic treatments.
Medical and longevity programmes are overseen by Dr Mark Mikhail and include blood testing alongside concierge-style health plans.
Wellness Café Emphasises Functional Nutrition
Tramp Health also includes a street-facing wellness café and terrace that opened in April.
The food concept was developed by nutritional therapist Eve Kalinik and head chef Marco Sanna.
The menu features smoothies, kefir bowls and light wellness-focused dishes incorporating functional ingredients such as collagen, creatine, MCT and lion’s mane mushrooms.
Design Reflects Longevity And Wellness Themes
The interiors were designed by Tomèf Design and centre around a large bronze “Tree of Life” sculpture.
Circadian lighting systems were also integrated throughout the club to reinforce the project’s longevity and wellbeing positioning.
Private Members’ Clubs Increasingly Expand Into Wellness
The launch reflects a wider trend across luxury hospitality and private members’ clubs as operators increasingly integrate wellness, fitness and preventive health into traditional social club concepts.
Growing consumer demand for holistic wellbeing experiences has encouraged more clubs and hospitality brands to combine social spaces with fitness, recovery and longevity services.
Recent examples across London’s luxury wellness market include Six Senses Place, Surrenne, Lanserhof at The Arts Club, Bodyism and Grey Wolfe.









