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    West Side Y

    3.8 (5 reviews)
    Open 5:00 am - 10:00 pm

    Services - West Side Y

    Multiple children care

    Single child care

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    XO Fitness - Welcome to XO Fitness!

    XO Fitness

    (6 reviews)

    I've been working out at XO Fitness for almost a year and a half and it's awesome! It's a small…read morefitness studio owned by Karin and Ryan Jennings that offers personal training and a variety of small group classes. I've trained with Karin before and it's a great workout. The trainers track your progress and gradually increase the difficulty of your workouts so you never plateau. The group classes are fun too. They're usually only 3-4 people so you get lots of personal attention. I highly recommend kickboxing, PiYo and the Strength Circuit. For small group classes and personal training the prices are great. I highly recommend XO for people of any level who want to get in shape and stay motivated!

    I love XO Fitness! In the summer of 2012 I was at my heaviest I'd ever been and was finally fed up…read morewith being over weight (more than 100 lbs over). Super self-conscious, I wanted a place where I could get private, one-on-one help. I also wanted a place that tailored a work out around me and my goals, not a "Lose 30 lbs in 30 days" sort of deal. I found everything I wanted and more at XO Fitness! Not only do they offer private training, group classes, yoga, pilates, and an ever changing work out designed just for you, there's also and nutrition program (which I very much needed)! And it's actually FUN, I look forward to every training session. Ryan, Karin and their staff are very knowledgeable and caring and want only the best for you! So if you're like me and want to skip the giant, crowded gym, I would highly recommend XO Fitness!

    Planet Fitness

    Planet Fitness

    (17 reviews)

    At the edge of town, tucked between a strip mall and an abandoned Blockbuster, stood a Planet…read moreFitness unlike any other. The lights never flickered, the smoothie bar was always stocked, and the cardio machines whispered like silk. It was the kind of place where biceps grew alongside confidence--and where two of the greatest employees in gym history made their mark: Henry and Reece. Henry was the Morning Shift King. Tall, calm, and always five minutes early, he greeted every member with a "What's up, champ?" and a smile that could melt the ice off a protein shake. Known for his crisp polo shirts and laser focus, he had memorized every regular's routine and even which treadmill didn't squeak after 30 minutes. He could restock the disinfectant spray bottles blindfolded--and once did, just to settle a bet. Reece, on the other hand, was the Night Shift Ninja. Witty, fast, and unpredictable in the best way, he ran the gym floor like a DJ mixing a live set. One second he was teaching an old man how to adjust the chest press, the next he was leading a spontaneous "Abs & Laughs" core class using only a Bosu ball and dad jokes. People didn't just come to train--they came to see what Reece would do next. What made Henry and Reece legendary, however, wasn't just their dedication. It was the night the Lunk Alarm Crisis hit. It was 7:02 p.m. on a Friday--the most chaotic hour. Someone had left the Smith machine loaded, grunting echoed from the free weight section, and worst of all, the Lunk Alarm was stuck in a permanent loop, blaring like a furious car alarm trapped in gym purgatory. Most would have panicked. But not Henry. Not Reece. Henry emerged from behind the front desk with a flashlight and a toolbox that hadn't been opened since orientation in 2017. Reece, meanwhile, sprinted from the locker rooms, towel in one hand, smoothie in the other. "I thought this day might come," said Henry, eyes squinting like a seasoned mechanic. Reece nodded. "Let's quiet the beast." They moved in perfect sync--Henry disabling the circuit breaker while Reece distracted the crowd by announcing an impromptu "Dance Cardio-Off" between two confused but eager Zumba veterans. Still, the alarm blared. Henry traced the wiring through the ceiling tiles, crawling through dust and dead flies like a gym rat in a jungle. Reece, ever the improviser, covered the noise by blasting "Eye of the Tiger" on the gym speakers and leading a dramatic group lunge session. Finally, at 7:39 p.m., Henry found it--a loose wire, gnawed by what he later described as "probably a very jacked mouse." With surgical precision, he reconnected it. Silence fell. The Lunk Alarm was defeated. The gym erupted in cheers. From that day on, they were more than employees--they were heroes. Management offered them a raise (they declined, but requested extra smoothie credits). Members made custom "Team Henry & Reece" shirts. Someone even tattooed a kettlebell with their initials on their calf. But for Henry and Reece, it wasn't about fame. "It's about the gains," Henry would say with a wink. "And making sure no one curls in the squat rack," Reece added. To this day, legends speak of the night the Lunk Alarm went mad and how two Planet Fitness employees saved the gym, one wire and one dance move at a time. And somewhere, between the treadmills and the judgment-free zone, their legacy still lifts.

    A new team member named Dan and the Green Bay east planet fitness was extremely helpful and…read morefriendly explaining how to do certain weight exercises to target the areas i asked him I needed help with on my body....seems very knowledgeable about fitness in general. A+ rating

    CrossFit Green Bay/Green Bay Strength and Conditioning

    CrossFit Green Bay/Green Bay Strength and Conditioning

    (16 reviews)

    I joined CrossFit Green Bay in 2014 and it immediately became my sollace. There's something very…read moreunique about the community at CFGB - from coaches who all genuinely care about proper movement and functionality, to members who are constantly encouraging one another during brutal WODs. I remember the night before my first On-Ramp class I was so nervous. I forced my brother to drive to the gym with me that night so I knew where to go. Well I was too afraid to even get out of my car to introduce myself . Anyways, fast forward a month and I'm doing my first official WOD for time. Eventually everyone finished except for me.. and I definitely started doubting myself. But they all gathered around and cheered me on until I was finished. You really can't top a culture like that! Since joining CFGB, I've not only become physically stronger but I've attained a certain mental toughness which has helped me beyond the walls of the gym. I can confidently accredit this to the coaches' tough love and constant drive to make every single member that walks through the doors of CFGB an overall better version of themselves. I've been to other gyms and I can whole heartedly say that nothing else compares to CFGB. This is definitely the place you want to be!

    I have had a very positive experience in my time at CFGB. While each box has their own personality,…read moreCFGB is pretty typical of a CF gym. Everybody is welcomed (all skill sets, backgrounds, etc.) and the coaches do a good job making sure that you understand the techniques for each movement in the exercises.

    The Salvation Army Ray and Joan Kroc Corps Community Center - Group Fitness Studio

    The Salvation Army Ray and Joan Kroc Corps Community Center

    (8 reviews)

    I recently cancelled my membership at the Salvation Army Kroc Center due to several concerning…read moreissues. Firstly, the discriminatory practice of not allowing Hispanics to play soccer is utterly unacceptable. The management hid all the soccer balls and prevented us from enjoying a sport we love. This exclusionary behavior is completely unjustifiable. Furthermore, the constantly changing cancellation policies added unnecessary frustration to the process. Each time I attempted to cancel, I was met with conflicting stories and unhelpful attitudes from the staff. Their lack of consistency and professionalism only added to my dissatisfaction. Overall, my experience at the Salvation Army Kroc Center was marred by rude staff and an environment that is clearly not welcoming to Hispanics. It's disheartening to see such blatant discrimination and poor customer service in a community center that should be inclusive and supportive of all its members. I will not be renewing my membership until change of environment. I have several people to back me up.

    I've been going here for a couple months now. I'd given 4-stars previously because the facility is…read moreclean and there are some smiling faces at the front desk, plus their brochure really sells up a lot of good ideas. But there are many things about this place that are pulling me away from that ranking. 1.) The inmates run the prison, because the only guards on duty work in clerical. There is no supervision of any kind - 3 or 4 Kroc Center employees hang out at the front desk and sometimes there's an employee at the desk in the weight machine room. They walk through the gym area to an "employees only" room several times per hour, reasons unknown. I've been coming here about once a week for just under two months now, and on THREE occasions I've had to "notify the front desk of a problem," always pertaining to people behaving inappropriately (breaking the rules) in the locker room. They keep acting like something will get done, but there's always someone else breaking the rules every time. 2.) The building is terribly designed. The locker room is for 14 yr olds and up, and there are 4 semi-private showers in there. It has a small changing area, lockers, and several bathroom stalls and sinks. It's too small for something that was built in 2010. They have private "cabanas" for families and small children to use, and you have to walk through this separate room to get to the locker rooms. The problem here is that the family area is HUGE with tons of lockers, but there are only somewhere around 6 or 8 cabanas, and they're always full (locked.) So every time I go to shower, there's some 5 year old staring at me while I dry off (I have tattoos, though I'm fairly certain that's not what they're looking at.) I've reported this on two occasions, and there's no way to know what kind of progress is being made. 3.) Any adults on the staff? At all? There are some good people working here, albeit ineffectual. None of my complaints have been addressed, and I'm getting tired of paying for a membership that requires I either complain endlessly or remain unnecessarily uncomfortable. It would be nice to see some professionals on the clock. 4.) The weight room is "on display." I haven't lifted weights since I got here, and I don't know if I'm going to want to. The weight room isn't a room, but a large space that you walk past on your way to the locker room. I'm honestly not in a place in my life where I want to advertise the way I look, but here there's no option. Not only is it open, but it's open to EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO GOES TO THE LOCKER ROOM. It's a nice, large area, and I can see the advantages in airflow technology. But it's too high traffic for me. 5.) I haven't used the swimming pool area yet because there's no dedicated "free swim" area. I like to get a little exercise swimming, but I'm not a good enough swimmer to do lap swim, and I'm not 8 anymore so I don't want to play in the kiddie play area, which in all honesty is way too overkill given the total size of the pool area. They create a free swim area by blocking off half of the lap swim area, but it's not a very large area, and OH YEAH, if you're looking to do lap swim, be aware that you'll not only have 4 or 6 lanes to work with (I can't remember exactly,) but the kiddie play area opens up into the lap swim area, meaning that the water flow is connected. This is so pro-kids that it's anti-adults. It doesn't surprise me that a Christian-based facility promotes breeding above all other considerations. 6.) Not so much a complaint, but something I'm figuring out over time: Before I moved here, a lot of my friends in the area had told me that the Kroc Center was a really nice facility. They said I'd like it. But take a look at what you're getting: Approximately 50% of the building is for exercise, working out, sports, swimming, whatever you want to call it. ATHLETICS. The other half of the building is a church and god knows what else. Possibly the learning centers for children, as I've seen such advertisements in their brochures. I'm a single male with no kids, and I'm an atheist. So if this is a nice facility, maybe it is... for someone else. I don't need free daycare (which I honestly think is a big part of the reason why this place sucks so much - people let their monsters run free while they workout) and I don't need spiritual guidance. I came here for a workout, for some sports, and to maintain a general routine. It's not easy treating this place with any professionalism when you get none in return.

    West Side Y - childcare - Updated May 2026

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