4 specialists design and install garden gyms across East of England. Typical builds run 12–25m² and £17,000–£40,000 fully fitted.

Crafting high-quality timber garden buildings for over 50 years.

Custom-designed garden rooms and renovation solutions in Norfolk and Suffolk.
Hawksbeck offers bespoke garden offices with exceptional design and quality.
Custom-built garden rooms designed to elevate your outdoor space.
A typical fully insulated garden gym in East of England costs between £17,000 and £40,000 in 2026, fully installed and ready to use. Below £17,000 you're usually looking at uninsulated summer houses or kit builds with thin (under 70mm) insulation that won't perform year-round.
The price range is wide because four variables drive most of the cost: floor area (typically £1,500–£2,500 per m² installed), cladding choice (cedar and larch add £1,000–£3,500 over composite), glazing package, and groundworks. Sites in East of England with easy vehicle access and level ground sit at the lower end; sloped or restricted-access sites can add £2,000–£5,000.
Reinforced foundations and proper ventilation are the cost drivers that set a gym apart from a standard build.
A garden gym has to take a beating: heavy free weights, dropped barbells and cardio machines. That means a reinforced base, impact-absorbing rubber flooring, mirrored walls, strong ventilation to clear humidity, and a higher-than-standard ceiling for overhead lifts.
For a gym, the structural base is everything — specify a reinforced concrete or steel-frame foundation rated to around 500kg/m² with an 18mm ply subfloor under rubber tiles, plus mechanical ventilation or air-con to manage sweat and condensation.
Most garden gyms in East of England fall under permitted development and don't require planning permission, provided the build is single-storey, no taller than 2.5m at the eaves (or 4m to a pitched ridge if more than 2m from any boundary), and doesn't cover more than half your garden.
Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Essex are generally permissive for outbuildings under 30m², with shorter planning queues than the South East.
Gyms rarely need planning, but the point loads from racks and dropped weights make the foundation spec — and condensation control — far more important than for a typical office.
Drier and flatter than most of the UK — straightforward groundworks and lower weatherproofing risk make this one of the easier regions for installers.
Cambridge in particular sees high demand from academics and tech workers needing quiet, year-round office space.
When comparing quotes, look beyond headline prices. The four quality markers that matter most are: insulation depth (aim for 100mm minimum), structural warranty (10 years is standard, 25 is excellent), build approach (bespoke vs modular vs kit), and whether they handle planning and groundworks themselves or sub-contract them.
Ask to visit a previous garden gym build in East of England before signing — most reputable installers will arrange this. Check that the company has been trading for at least 3–5 years and look for consistent independent reviews on Trustpilot, Google and Houzz.
Always get at least three quotes, with itemised pricing for foundations, structure, glazing and electrics so you can compare apples-to-apples. Be wary of any quote significantly cheaper than the others — corners are usually being cut on insulation, glazing or warranty.
Yes — specify a reinforced concrete or steel-frame base rated for 500kg/m² and request 18mm ply subfloor under rubber tiles.