The new fitness center features open turf style flooring for skills development, small group training, and maximum versatility for coaches and trainers, offering much more than just a row of stair climbers.
D-Fit is a new approach to health care that combines fitness and exercise with healthy living, coaching, and a positive attitude to support lifelong health and peak performance.
PIKE CREEK, Del. — A longtime Pike Creek fitness center is charting a new direction, refocusing its mission to treat physical fitness as a cornerstone of lifelong health, character development, and community well-being.
Formerly known as Delaware Swim & Fitness Center, the facility at 4905 Mermaid Blvd. now operates as D-Fitreflecting a shift away from the traditional “gym membership” model toward an integrated approach centered on prevention, healthy habits, and engagement for all ages. The center is open and serving members, while renovations and upgrades continue daily.
Flexible rooms for fitness classes, person training, dance, yoga and stretching are well underway.
The transformation is being led by Mike Ramonea former state representative and House Republican minority leader who owns the facility and has deep roots in northern Delaware’s fitness, swim, and youth sports communities.
Ramone said the refocus reflects a belief shaped by years in public service — that the health care system devotes far more attention to treating illness than to preventing it.
“Healthy living should be the goal of health care,” Ramone said. “If we help people develop good habits early and reinforce them throughout life, we can prevent many of the problems that bring people into the system in the first place.”
From gym to wellness hub
D-Fit’s evolving model mirrors a national trend in which fitness centers are becoming wellness hubs that support healthy aging, chronic disease prevention, mobility, stress reduction and social connection. Rather than selling access to equipment, the focus is on engagement, instruction and long-term results.
New graphics, flooring, and training equipment upgrade the space for a new approach to health care.
Renovations underway are reshaping the interior of D-Fit to support functional movement, athletic development and guided training rather than rows of isolated machines. Workout areas are being upgraded with turf-style flooring that allows for strength training, agility work and sport-specific drills in a safer, more versatile environment. New and reconfigured spaces are designed for individual coaching and small-group training, enabling instructors to work closely with members on proper technique, goal-setting and progression.
“This is about more than 20 minutes on an elliptical and a sauna,” Ramone said. “A healthy life is a way of thinking — a way of achieving your best and enjoying life, often with others who are working toward the same goals.”
Serving families, athletes, and seniors
The center serves a broad cross-section of the community, from children and competitive athletes to working adults and seniors.
Amenities include a full fitness center with classes for all levels, an indoor basketball court, batting cages, saunas and steam rooms, along with a pro shop, personal training, yoga, Zumba and pickleball. Aquatics remain central to the facility, with swim school, swim teams, water aerobics and lap lanes continuing to operate.
The pool is now open, and improvements to the locker room and aquatics area are part of the plan.
Youth sports and family programming are a major focus. AAU and travel teams can collaborate with D-Fit staff on athletic development, while children can participate in swimming, dance and martial arts in structured, team-based environments that emphasize effort, discipline and teamwork.
Ramone said athletics and fitness, when done correctly, are powerful tools for character development and personal growth.
“Physical fitness isn’t just about the body,” he said. “It teaches discipline, confidence, and resilience in young people, and it helps people of all ages live healthier, happier, and more balanced lives. Those lessons carry into school, work and everyday life.”
Older adults are also a growing priority, reflecting increased demand for low-impact exercise, balance training, aquatic programs and supervised environments that promote safe movement and social connection.
Advanced exercise equipment are still an important compliment to the new health and fitness training philosophy.
Improvements continue
While D-Fit is fully operational, renovations and upgrades will continue as part of an ongoing improvement plan. Current offerings include the pool, workout rooms, dance studio, basketball courts and a large general-purpose room, with additional enhancements to locker rooms and weight rooms planned as work progresses.
Ramone said the goal is not a single reopening, but a sustained commitment to improvement as the center’s mission takes shape.
“I wasn’t able to lead a revolution in health care from the State House,” he said. “But I still believe in the idea. This is a way to demonstrate — in a real, practical way — how a community fitness center can help people live better lives.”
For more information, D-Fit can be reached at 302-234-8500.
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