Startup Spotlight: Jake Allyne brings physical fitness to clients with developmental disabilities

Fitness training can be a challenge for the average person, but for individuals with developmental disabilities the pursuit of gym-bound wellness comes with a wealth of additional considerations.

Startup Spotlight
Allyne

A new gym in Hartsdale called Breakthrough Fitness Co. offers a distinctive special-needs fitness program under the supervision of Jake Allyne, a personal trainer who has become an expert in this niche within the fitness world.

Allyne had not previously considered opening his own business until the Covid-19 pandemic forced the temporary closing of his big-box gym employer.

“I didn”™t go back to my regular job,” he said. “I pivoted when the pandemic hit and worked virtually. And I had a large client base within the special needs community, including clients with autism and cerebral palsy.”

Allyne was introduced to this client base during his college years when he worked with a special needs fitness program at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan. His popularity in this field quickly grew, and during his big-box gym gigs he became the go-to trainer for special needs clients.

As the pandemic restrictions began to ease, he would meet with his clients at parks and later in his garage, which he turned into a workout space. To his surprise, these clients sought him more during this time.

“They increased their frequency because so many other things were cut off and that was a big impact on them socially,” he said.

But for a post-pandemic environment, Allyne realized he needed something that could accommodate a growing client base.

“I realized I couldn”™t do it as a solo endeavor,” he said. “I needed to get out of my garage and into an actual space.”

Allyne worked with the Westchester County Office of Economic Development”™s Launch1000 program. The result is a new gym that will be ready for a soft opening in late July, with a grand opening set for September.

In approaching the training regimens of clients with developmental disabilities, Allyne explained that an in-depth analysis of individual needs is crucial for planning a successful strategy.

“I”™ll normally take a good hour or two to spend with them and see how their body moves, what gets them to tick, what they like,” he said. “And then, we”™ll start with simple everyday movements and coordination ”” some of them work better within one plane of motion, some of them work better with patterns.”

Allyne is planning for a combination of one-on-one and group training sessions. But he is also cognizant on creating an environment that will not disrupt his clients”™ concentration on training. For example, the typical gym design with a seemingly endless number of monitors and screens on machines and walls would work against a 13-year-old client who is obsessed with video imagery.

“When you put 200 screens in a room, it”™s very hard to get him to focus,” he said. “But when we took the screens away, that was when he flourished.”

Actually, he went beyond flourishing ”” Allyne added that he received word that his young client recently took first place in the 200-meter sprint at a Special Olympics tournament.

Allyne also highlighted a client with autism who used the pandemic period to increase her exercise frequency, resulting in a 40-pound weight loss.

Allyne also maintains a base of nondisabled clients, and he stressed one key instruction that applies to all of his clients is the value of maintaining a state of wellness.

“I think that daily movement and a moderately balanced diet can decrease a lot of the health risks that we as a society take on,” he said. “This is especially more beneficial to the special needs community.”