Posts Tagged ‘outdoor’

Practicing walking

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

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Practicing walking on my knees.

There is a first for everything…Last week I wore a DRESS for the first time in sixteen years standing tall in my leg braces.  For those of you who live close by…I hope you can join us for our little gathering at the Aspen Club and Spa on August 12th.  Love, Amanda

Join Kasie, Leah & Amanda

Tuesday, August 12th

5-8 p.m.

Aspen Club & Spa Outdoor Deck

 

“Tuesdays With Michael”

Pursuing Possibilities Celebration

 

To benefit and raise awareness for Kasie, Leah & Amanda’s

Human Embryonic Stem Cell Therapy in India

 

Free music, food, drinks, and giveaways

 

Food provided by Garnish Cafe

Tuesday August 12th

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Join us Tuesday, August 12th from 5-8 p.m. at the Aspen Club & Spa “Tuesdays with Michael” Pursing Possibilities Celebration to raise awareness for Kasie, Leah & Amanda’s Human Embryonic Stem Cell Therapy in India.

Live music, free food, drinks & giveaways.  The event is free and open to the public.  Donations towards Kasie, Leah, and Amanda for their ongoing HESC treatment are encouraged.

Where:  Aspen Club & Spa outdoor deck

When:  Tuesday, August 12th from 5-8 p.m.

What:  “Tuesdays with Michael” Pursuing Possibilities Celebration to raise awareness for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Therapy in India.

Contributions are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. This campaign is administered by the National Transplant Asssitance Fund, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit providing fundraising assistance to transplant and catastrophic injury patients.  For information: 1-800-642-8399

Blogs:  www.helpkasieburtard.wetpaint.com; www.helpleahroland.com; www.amandaboxtel.wordpress.com

Chic Today

Monday, July 21st, 2008

 It all started in Monte Carlo when I first heard of Aspen from a devastatingly handsome guy who stole my heart in a fraction of a heartbeat. Later I learned that for whatever strange reason, men and women are equally gorgeous wherever you look in this town, just like my ten-year-long romance with Aspen has been—as if Aspen and Monte Carlo had something in common. In the middle of expensive, elegant, sexy, classy partying, you make connections that last a lifetime. Is this because people are gorgeous and irresistible? Or, is this because of the personality they all seem to share? Elegance coupled with a laidback approach are both at work at the same time. There is something really special and inviting about such ambiance. Add that to Aspen’s own magical touch, that intriguingly inspiring charm you cannot find anyplace else, and you understand God’s mischievous creation for fun everlasting!

Just in case the late night partying wears you out, the Aspen Club & Spa, a one of a kind, state-of-the-art full service spa will put you right back on track. Located in a scenic mountain setting with a full size swimming pool, indoor and outdoor Jacuzzi, steam rooms, sauna, juice bar, spa services, trainers, beauticians and even chiropractors, it has amenities to satisfy all worldly desires and give you a glimpse of the good life!

Click here to read the full article at Chic Today 

Tuesday with Michael

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

That’s right, we have Free Beer for July 8th’s Tuesday with Michael featuring the  Shining Stars. Come early to enjoy music, food and Free Beer.

Menu provided by Chef Clark Church of Garnish Cafe

MENU For July 8th
Imported Cheese and Fruit Display
House-Made Chutneys and Jams
Assorted Flat Breads and Crackers
~
Antipasto Display
Grilled Seasonal Vegetables, Marinated Olives,
Orzo Pasta Salad, Sliced Cured Meats
~
Asian Salad
With Sweet n Spicy Rock Shrimp
~
Assorted Sushi Rolls and Sashimi
Served with Classic Garnishes
~
Flowerless Chocolate Cakes,
Profiteroles and Lemon Cakes with Local Cherries

Tuesdays with Michael is an event held here at the Aspen Club and Spa to benefit local non-profits. The events start at 5pm on the Aspen Club outdoor deck and goes till 8pm. There is live music, great food and lots of entertainment for the whole family. We offer free shuttle service as well, call 925.8900 to schedule a ride.

Shining Stars Mission Statement
The mission of the Shining Stars Foundation is to provide sport, recreational, and outreach programs for children with cancer and life threatening diseases at no cost to the child or their families.

Living healthy is a proposition for the future

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

We are all the future of The Aspen Club & Spa and we are all the future of Aspen.

That’s because as we look beyond tourism, real estate and construction, we look toward a future of sustain­ability and healthy living — an opportunity to combine local vitality with economic survival.

Let’s take a trip down memory lane to get a sense of this Aspen institution known as The Aspen Club & Spa.

Flashback circa 1978, The Aspen Club: The Aspen Club is the tennis club extraordinaire, hosting pro-celebrity charity events that bring excitement and energy to our quiet mountain town with the big-time ski hill.

Visitors and locals flock to the club to play, watch, workout and gather.

Flashback circa 1997, The Aspen Club & Spa: Evolving to meet emerging trends in health and fitness, new Aspen Club owner Michael Fox relocates to Aspen and spends $8 million to renovate and upgrade the 77,000-square-foot club. And when it re-opens in December 1997, it isn’t just another pretty-face spa. Rather, it is a one­stop health club, sports medicine facility, and spa and salon with an inclusive approach that fur­thers the Aspen idea of mind, body and spirit.

Housing local non-profits, hosting hundreds of non­profit events as well as employing hundreds of local employees, The Aspen Club builds its reputation as a vital community asset.

Flash forward 2012, Aspen Club Living —The Future of The Aspen Club & Spa: In support of Mayor Mick Ireland’s view that Aspen is a “town that reach­es for the best” and is known for its environmental stewardship, Aspen Club Living is recognized as the first project in the country to combine sus­tainable green development with a holistic wellness focus to create a healthy living community.

Environmentally conscious, frac­tional residences replace 30-year-old tennis courts, allowing families, visi­tors and community members to spend quality time together relaxing by the outdoor pool or learning about healthy living in a retreat setting.

Innovative healthy living classes and programs bring the community and visitors together to refresh, recharge and even reinvent.

Aspen Club employees live and breathe the Aspen idea while living on-site in desirable affordable hous­ing. With the opportunity to grow professionally, they choose to stay in town rather than move downvalley or to a big city. Guests, members and employees join forces to utilize alter­native modes of transportation. Bikes, electric cars and other forms of ener­gy efficient transportation replace cars.

Major upgrades and renovations to The Aspen Club & Spa’s facilities pro­vide members and guests access to a state-of-the-art health and wellness centers.

The Aspen community had a choice in 2008, and they chose local vitality and healthy, sustainable living.

The Business Lounge is a feature of Inside Business, published Tuesdays in The Aspen Times.

Kim Moore is the Aspen Life Director at The Aspen Club & Spa, where she oversees healthy living pro­grams and retreats. A 15-year valley resident, Moore serves as a big buddy with The Buddy Program and is the membership chair of the Aspen Young Professionals Association. For more information, e-mail her at kmoore@aspenclub.com.

 

Aspen Times Article in the Business Lounge 

DJ Brian Howe

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

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Tuesdays with Michael is an event held here at the Aspen Club and Spa to benefit local non-profits. The events start at 5pm on the Aspen Club outdoor deck and goes till 8pm. There is live music, great food and lots of entertainment for the whole family. We offer free shuttle service as well, call 925.8900 to schedule a ride.

About Komen Aspen
Welcome to the Aspen Affiliate of Susan G. Komen For The Cure! The Aspen Affiliate was established in 1990 by Sandra Goldman Israel. Komen Aspen tri-county service area includes the region from Battlement Mesa to Vail, CO as well as the Roaring Fork Valley. We are the only agency in our service area that provides grants and direct outreach to educate the public about breast health. Through our grants we are able to provide local women with low-cost or no-cost breast screening and diagnostics.

Music this week provided by DJ Brian Howe. DJ Brian Howe can be heard every week on XM RADIO’S “Air 81″ mixshow on BPM (ch. 81) by over 7.4 million people across the world!!  Along with his weekly mixshow slot, he is a producer and promoter for CAPP Records which is responsible for releasing top charting dance hits in the U.S. and always on the cutting edge in trend setting energetic music.
Click here to watch DJ Brian Howe on Youtube

Aspen Club timeshare plan passes P&Z

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

 by Curtis Wackerle, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

A plan to build 20 timeshare units at the Aspen Club and Spa received a preliminary approval from the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission this week.

The 4-1 vote, which came at the end of the fifth two-hour session before the P&Z in recent months, laid blessing to the project’s design and massing. Lingering concerns about traffic and open space will be addressed when the plan goes before City Council.

“The project is moving in the right direction,” Jessica Garrow, long-range planner with the Community Development Department, said Wednesday. “It’s not all the way there, but (remaining issues) can be addressed through the final review.”

The ownership of the Aspen Club and Spa, represented by Michael Fox, a co-owner who manages the day-to-day operations of the club, seeks to build 53,900 square feet of timeshare lodging units, divided into 20 three- and four-bedroom units, a 34,630-square-foot expansion to the club athletic facilities, and 12,330 square feet of affordable housing divided into 12 two-bedroom units. The plan also includes a 53-space underground parking garage and 45 surface parking spaces.

The 20 timeshares, which would be allocated into one-sixteenth interests, would be sold as a health and wellness retreat under a concept being called Aspen Club Living. When the timeshare members aren’t there, and in the shoulder seasons, the units would be made available to the general public. The sale of the timeshare units would finance millions of dollars of improvements to the club’s facilities, many of which betray their 1970s origins.

In the coming months, the project will go before City Council, which will give a conceptual review to the overall development plan. If it passes the council’s conceptual review, it will go back to P&Z, and then again to City Council for final review.

The original design considered by the P&Z included 19 timeshare units, but 3,000 more total square feet of timeshares. City planning staff and P&Z did not approve of the layout of buildings on the site, which put two buildings with four and seven units along the “lower bench” of the site, where the outdoor tennis courts sit. The design did not address sufficiently the river and bike path, which are directly below the “lower bench” and created a wall of building between the main club building and riparian area, city planning staff said.

The design has since been reworked, removing a unit from the lower bench and dividing the two buildings into three smaller buildings with more open space between. All of the units were made smaller, but planners added a unit onto the upper portion of the site, bringing the total up to 20 units while reducing the total square footage by 3,000 square feet.

“I commend you for the changes you have made,” Commissioner Stan Gibbs said. “They make the project much better.”

Gibbs noted that he still has questions related to how the club will reduce the amount of traffic the new lodging would generate, but he can support the project conceptually.

The Aspen Club is proposing measures such as increasing shuttle service and implementing a car share program that it said would eliminate the additional traffic the timeshare development would create on Ute Avenue.

The club is are seeking a specially planned area — or SPA — designation, which applies to projects with unique site constraints in which the public interest would be served if underlying zoning regulations were scrapped.

About 15 community members and club employees came to the meeting to support the proposed project. Allowing the club to expand its programming and improve its facilities would be a benefit to the entire valley, supporters said.

The timeshare units will add to Aspen’s shrunken pool of short-term rental units and will bring “high quality” customers for Aspen’s business community, said Warren Klug, general manager of the Aspen Square condo hotel. He added that an amenity like the Aspen Club is crucial to the satisfaction of Aspen’s visitors.

“The club has a huge value to our economy,” Klug said.

But Richard Nieley, an attorney working for neighbors opposed to the project, cautioned that all the good things the club does today should not be argued as a basis for approving the new development. Everything could change overnight should the club, with its new timeshare units, be sold.

“The only guarantee is that you will get 20 new free market units,” Neiley said. “You have to separate the good things they do now from what could happen in the future.”

Commissioner Michael Wampler said he has no qualms with the massing and density on the site, and that the traffic issue could be dealt with.

But he noted that he is still struggling with questions about the development’s public benefits and whether the east end of Ute Avenue is an appropriate area for lodging. He also said he would like to see a condition of approval requiring a deed restriction ensuring that the club continues indefinitely as an athletic club.

In voting no, Commissioner LJ Erspamer said he would like to see fewer timeshare units on the site. By adding one unit from the original total, the project will introduce more people, traffic and impacts to the site, Erspamer said.

curtis@aspendailynews.com

Zele Community Table

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Interview with Kim Moore at Zele Cafe with Michael Conniff with Aspenpost.net 

Kim Moore, Carmela Tafoya, Michael Conniff

Michael Conniff: How did you get started with personal coaching?

Kim Moore: I was a counselor at CMC [Colorado Mountain College], and the climbing professor—the outdoor education director—said: “You need to meet this woman who helps people live the life of their dreams.” I said take me there now. What a great job! It brings together academics, career, professional.

MC: Why is counseling not enough?

KM: Because you have a certain template in school—these are the classes you can take, these are the careers. That wasn’t enough. So much more that goes into it.

MC: Like what?

KM: Action and accountability.

Carmela Tafoya: Our counseling model today isn’t about giving a people a method and strategy for their lives. It’s just talking about the problems. Just more and more problems.

KM: They get to justify their problem. “Every time I start dating something new, they end up taking advantage of me.” They’re re-living it.

CT: They model about what you don’t want and what doesn’t feel good. It’s a psychotherapy model. You have to ignore those things and focus. I’m a proponent of psychotherapy. I mean even Freud. But more Jung. That’s fine for a particular point for particular things, but there’s so much beyond that. They need someone to look at the broad spectrum of their lives.

KM: People are tired of coming up with it themselves.

CT: They need an action plan.

MC: What’s your training for this?

KM: I was trained in counseling with a master’s degree in counselor education. It was mental health counseling. Coaching is more functional. If people really had a psychological problem, I’d ask them to get therapy.

CT: I think it’s borderline—I’d do that if it’s more medically or mentally determined. What coaches do is also borderline—it crosses borders when you feel more comfortable with the individual. I go to a counselor, a psychotherapist. There’s not a stigma around it.

KM: Tiger Woods has a coach.

MC: So where do you start with someone?

KM: I ask them: “Where are you and where do you want to be.” Where have you been that’s less relevant. It’s the idea of “so what?”

CT: The past is past. Leave it there.

MC: Isn’t there a danger in that?

KM: In ignoring the past? The patterns emerge anyway. Where you were is always present. An example of that is myself with Carmela.

MC: Your own personal coach. You’re a coach with a coach.

CT: My specialty is exercise, nutrition, quality of life.

KM: The pattern for me is lack of consistency. I always get great results in a very short time in whatever I’m striving for. Then it just goes away and I don’t notice. I forget all about that. Because I’d rather eat, drink, and be merry. It doesn’t serve me because I end up not as happy as I could be with being in my body—it affects it all. I don’t even want to have sex. I don’t walk in and out of the room the same way. That’s the weird thing.

Aspen Club expansion gets scrutiny from public, P&Z

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

by Brent Gardner-Smith, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

The city of Aspen will have some weighty factors to sift through with the proposed Aspen Club residential expansion project.

The owners of the Aspen Club and Spa, located east of downtown Aspen, are proposing to build 19 condominiums through a building expansion and on what is now the club’s tennis courts.

In a concept called Aspen Club Living, owners of the units would buy two weeks each year to come for a healthy retreat, taking advantage of Aspen’s amenities and expanded wellness programs at the club.

The proceeds from the sales of the 304 timeshare interests, which if sold at $2,000 per square foot would top $94 million in sales, would finance a renovation of existing club facilities, including a new outdoor pool and new locker rooms. The timeshare owners would not have access to their units in the shoulder seasons, when the club would offer weeklong wellness retreats to the general public.

The project would also include 12 affordable housing units that would house about 27 employees. All this is proposed to be built to LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards, and would include an array of solar panels and a ground-source heat-pump system.

In a two-hour meeting with Aspen’s Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday, a wide range of issues were touched upon, but no vote was taken. The P&Z must recommend approval or denial to Aspen City Council.

Town staff supports the concept of a wellness-themed timeshare development, but has issues with its design, architecture and mass, and how it relates to the nearby Roaring Fork River. The design of the residential buildings, particularly one long building that will house seven of the 19 units, cuts off the view from the entrance of the club to the nearby riparian area, city planner Jessica Garrow told the commissioners. The planning office would like to see the structure more broken up, Garrow said, and finds the architecture itself uninspiring.

“I don’t think the architecture represents the mission that has been stated,” Garrow said.

An architect from Poss Architecture and Planning, which designed the units, said perhaps the planning office had not been able to “pull out of the drawings” the project’s unique features. The architect cautioned that pulling the mass of the building apart would create dark, U-shaped dead spaces between the buildings.

Some of the club’s 200 employees showed up to praise their workplace, saying the club’s expansion would further professional opportunities for its personal trainers, massage therapists and physical therapists. The club was presented as an organization that does right by its community through its existing wellness programs and the dozens of local nonprofits it supports.

“This is exactly what you would want to see for the next level for the club,” said Mindy Nagle, a local physician who said the club is a major source of referrals to her office.

“We could all grow in a direction that we wouldn’t normally be able to do,” said Morgan Walsh, a massage therapist at the club.

The most clear opposition came from a lawyer representing neighbors, who said it’s “just another real estate development” with questionable benefits to the community.

Rick Nieley pointed out that for Aspen Club owner Michael Fox to get approval to build a timeshare lodge, he must be approved under a provision of the land-use code known as a specially planned area, or SPA. According to the code language, an SPA is reserved for areas where because of the “unique historic, natural, physical or locational characteristics of the site” the public interest would be better served if different zoning was granted.

Nieley argued that the Aspen Club Living project meets none of these criteria.

Happiness with the way club is run is not reason enough to approve essentially a hotel surrounded by residential zoning, Nieley said, adding that Fox would have to demonstrate the new growth would add something more to the community than continuing existing services.

Time constraints prevented Fox from being able to respond to Neiley’s statement. But prior to Tuesday’s meeting, Fox denied that Aspen Club Living is another real estate development; rather, it’s a unique opportunity to create a sustainable, holistic amenity that will secure the Aspen Club’s future for generations.

“If it’s done right, the Aspen Club could be an icon throughout the world,” Fox said.

The traffic debate

Opponents of the project say that club-generated traffic on Ute Avenue is already bad enough, and that this project would make it worse. But Fox said steps can be taken to reduce traffic currently generated by the club’s 1,900 members (up from 400 just five years ago).

Club representatives presented traffic estimates that concluded the residential expansion would increase traffic volume on Ute Avenue by 15 percent. Fox said that can be mitigated by instituting paid parking for members and guests, doubling or tripling the level of its shuttle service to and from the club, and providing a fleet of electric cars for guests and affordable-housing residents to use.

Sunny Vann, the club’s planning consultant, said that the real issue is traffic capacity on Ute Avenue, which he said isn’t close to being full. Opposition to more traffic isn’t sufficient reason to deny the project when the road has more capacity, Vann said.

But the city, and neighbors to the project, are demanding more specifics on what measures the club would take to reduce traffic and how much traffic, specifically, the club thinks its mitigation measures will take off the road.

“I don’t think anyone has focused on what really will work,” said Gary Rappaport, a part-time homeowner on Ute Avenue.

Other members of the community expressed fear that if the club is not allowed redevelopment, its owners would sell to someone who would raze the community institution to build second homes.

Aspenite Steve Marolt, who acknowledged that his reputation of late has been against development, said the city must consider the alternative if the timeshare project isn’t built.

The city “wouldn’t have to give the world” to Fox to make the project work, but Fox could easily sell to another owner who wouldn’t think twice about tearing down the club and replacing it with 5,000-square-foot trophy homes, Marolt said. He termed Fox’s proposal the best alternative.

curtis@aspendailynews.com

Congratulations to Jack and Bonnie Wilke

Friday, February 29th, 2008

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Congratulations to Jack and Bonnie Wilke

Aspen Club Members of the Month!

Jack and Bonnie have been members here few quite a while. They have been very active in the Aspen community and have been role models to all on what it truly means to live the Aspen Life! They have been committed to their own health and wellness by taking Pialtes and personal training sessions and their dedication to their fitness program is setting the precedent for healthy living.

Both Jake and Bonnie have had to address some injuries and/or health issues but this proves to be no set back to achieving their health and fitness goals. Catherine Cussaguet, their Pilates Reformer instructor praises their consistency, labeling it as remarkable! What she finds inspirational is that do not limit their workouts to trainer only sessions, they also include cardiovascular workouts into their daily routine. Besides training at the Club the Wilke’s enjoy the beautiful outdoors, whether it is walking their dog every day, Bonnie enjoying the numerous Nordic ski trails her in Aspen or Jack taking a few runs down the mountain they are incorporating health and fitness in their everyday life.

Dawn Shepard, their personal trainer, agrees, that the Wilkes are truly inspirational. “They live a very active- Aspen lifestyle. I really appreciate their sense of humor, their tenacity when dealing with injury and how much they really care about each other. Having loving relationships in your life is key to being happy and healthy.” We are excited and proud to have the Wilkes as part of our Aspen Club Family. We wish them continued success; we are honored to be part of their journey.