What makes the Beaverton crew special? It’s the blend. You’ll find tech workers from Hillsboro next to marathon moms, WFH graphic designers, and retired triathletes. The unspoken rule: you compete only with your last ride. The room is low-light but not moody—neon LEDs pulse with the beat, and the front wall glows with real-time effort zones (green, orange, red). Push into the red? That’s where the magic—and sweat angels—happen.
Instructors here are known for calling out names mid-track: “Great hold, Sarah! Fifteen more seconds in the saddle—then attack!” That personal touch turns a group of strangers into a late-night peloton. les mills rpm beaverton
Nestled in the heart of Pacific Northwest fitness culture, isn’t just a workout. It’s a 45-minute velodrome party on two wheels, powered by science, synced to thundering house music, and led by instructors who coach like they’re crewing a Tour de France stage—but with way more charisma and zero spandex judgment. What makes the Beaverton crew special
You were flying.
Traditional spin classes often focus on “go harder, go faster.” RPM flips the script. Developed by the global fitness legends at Les Mills (creators of BodyPump and BodyCombat), RPM is a research-driven, music-fueled journey through seven core tracks: from warm-up, through hills, speed work, and intervals, to a cool-down that actually leaves you feeling taller. The unspoken rule: you compete only with your last ride