B

Bodyweight Fitness

— Getting strong without a gym membership
102 members Created Feb 2026

Why I switched to 3-day full-body programming instead of push/pull/legs

Calisthenics Park Design: What Makes One Useful

Calisthenics parks vary enormously in quality. Here's what separates a genuinely useful park from a decoration.

Must have: pull-up bars at multiple heights (to accommodate different body sizes and exercise angles), parallel bars or dip stations, and enough open ground space to lie down and do core work.

Very useful: monkey bars or ladder bars (useful for mobility and traversal), rings attachment points (not all parks have these), low bars for Australian pull-ups and back lever entry, and varied grip surfaces (straight bar, fat bar, angled).

Bonus: box jump platforms, parallettes, and a covered area for training in rain. Lighting for evening sessions.

The density of equipment in a small area is better than equipment spread over a large area. You want to be able to move between stations without wasting time.

When visiting a new city, I check Google Maps satellite view and search for 'calisthenics park' in the area. Parks in European cities tend to be the most well-equipped — Germany, Spain, and Eastern European countries in particular.

-1

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Report thread

Why are you reporting this thread?