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Summer Personal Training Offer with Max Edwards, exclusively at ESPH East Dulwich Gym!?


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Summer Personal Training Offer with Max Edwards, exclusively at ESPH East Dulwich Gym!?


Book five sessions with Max and receive one taster session free. No membership necessary.?


Offer only available with Max at ESPH East Dulwich for July and August 2014.?


Contact Max at ESPH for a free consultation now and take the first step towards your goals!


Group and Buddy Personal Training also available. Speak to Max for further details.


Max Edwards

Freelance Fitness Consultant

ESPH East Dulwich?

116 Lordship Lane

London

SE22 8HD

Tel: 020 7907 1900

Email: [email protected]?

&?

[email protected]


Max says:


"Become a positive embodiment of good health, mindfully, physically, emotionally, and view fitness as an integral part of life, as with food and laughter. Keep things fresh and interesting and importantly enjoy it all?


?health and fitness is fun and energising and should inspire us to come back for more, time and time again?"


Max has been a qualified personal trainer, fitness class teacher and fitness instructor for over ten years. Training in one form or another since childhood, Max competed in, and instructed, karate until 1998. Max is a passionate cyclist both in the studio - as a qualified spin class instructor - and outdoors, on and off-road. His expertise covers diet, resistance training, cardiovascular fitness and core stability. Max's approach to personal training is one of aligning the mind with the body so that they work together perfectly to support individuals in reaching goals. He uses a multi-disciplinary approach to identify strengths and areas needing work to ensure health and fitness programmes take care of the whole person while motivating them towards their specific objectives.?

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    • You're being a little disingenuous here. It is simply not true that "the area should remain suburban 2/3 storeys maximum" because: -> the area the development is in isn't 2/3 storeys maximum today - as evidenced by the school on the lot adjoining the development to the south, as well as the similarly-sized buildings to the north and east.  -> the SPG doesn't preclude this type of development anyway. This "genie in a bottle" stuff is desperate barrel-scraping. Now you're raising the spectre of a 9 storey building on the Gibbs & Dandy site (the chance would be a fine thing) but also arguing Southwark is too slow to approve things and opposed to development more than 2-3 storeys!
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