One of America’s Top Trainers
Weighed His Options & Picked Aspen


By Kent Smith
Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

When
Jean-Robert Barbette’s father carved
wooden dumbbells for his son, he didn’t know the
5-year-old would lift himself to the pinnacle of per-
sonal training, attracting big-name clients and
national acclaim to his Aspen gym.
Twenty - eight years later, the Belgian fitness
phenom is notching accolades from New York to
Aspen, where he runs a personal-training center.
They include recently being named one of the top
50 trainers in America by Vogue magazine,and
appearing with student Johnny Depp in an article
in the New York Daily News.
His passion for exercise started in his father’s
gymnasium in Liege, Belgium, one that bore little
resemblance to
Jean-Robert’s glass-and-mirror
sanctuary at Hyman Avenue and Original Street.
Jean-Robert first felt the spiritual exhilaration of ex-
haustion in his father’s gym, a spirit that carries
him today.





When the landlord wanted to raise his rent
from $2,000 a month to $2,800 four years ago,
Barbette again dug his heels in: He opened the
state-of-the-art facility featuring dozens of new,
complete training machines and panoramic
views that stretch from Smuggler to Ajax.
For personal training sessions, students
hear music they selected for their workout
when they walk in. Air and water supplies are
filtered, and the gym is cleaned top to bottom
several times a week; students must leave
their shoes at the door.

Jean-Robert’s approach to body building varies
significantly from most conventional trainers.
For one, he stresses conditioning of back
muscles using a simple wooden staff.
The back is the center of much of your
strength, for men and women. It’s overlooked,
he said.

Oh yes, there’s the skiing. Jean-Robert prefers working in Aspen because
the lifestyle is perfect here.
I can train people in the morning, ski
at lunch and train in the afternoon or
evening.

Shortly after coming to Aspen
he and a colleague introduced the
monoski to Ajax Mountain.
Jean-Robert doesn’t
care much that it hasn’t caught on in the U.S.
It reflects his drive for progress
and innovation.

He worked in a local gym training
clients for two years until the owner
refused to give him araise above his $10
-per-hour salary. He opened his own gym
in the Brand Building, a place
?with no windows, no frills
except for the trainer, who says he made
$120,000 his second year in his own gym.



I wanted to follow in his footsteps,
Jean-Robert 33,
said quietly. I could be much more of a success
in New York, in real estate, you see, but I want to
help them. I care about my students.
He began serious training summers as a teen-
ager in St. Tropez, France, where he moonlighted
as a 160-pound bouncer in a joint that averaged
two fights a night. A former strength trainer for
the French junior ski team, he hit the winter slopes
at Courchevel.
Jean-Robert landed on America’s East Coast at
age 26 with $400 in my pocket. He said he heard
about a place called Aspen that, like New York,
was a wonderful place, but a tough place. If you
could make it here, you could make it anywhere.
That’s what I wanted.

His client list is impressive.
Jean-Robert main-
tains the confidentiality of his clients, but suf-
fice to say it’s one Robin Leach could use for
his scripts.
Not that all of them are triathletes,Barbette
revels in raising students to their potential,
not trying to reach someone else’s. He
also works to prevent pain for students, and
to make them feel good after workouts, not
drained or sore.
I try to find the athlete in everybody, he
said of his techniques. You have to make
some people believe in themselves.


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Jean Robert Gym Corp. All rights reserved.