Look Inside London’s Latest Wellness Hub, Tramp Health
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The hedonistic hotspot opens its doors this month
Mayfair hotspot Tramp might be better known for all-night parties rather than early-morning pilates – but this month, the renowned members club will finally open its brand new wellness space. And while most have set their sights on the hub’s long list of luxury facilities, we’re still reeling over Tramp Health’s beautiful new interiors. Ahead of its grand opening, C&TH takes a look inside.
A Closer Look At The Interiors Of Tramp Health
Tramp has never been one to shy away from grand gestures. Originally founded in 1969 by Johnny Gold, Oscar Lerman and Bill Ofner, the London members club has cultivated a name for itself as a honeypot of hedonism.
That hedonism still exists – but now, current Tramp owner and CEO Luca Maggiora is ready to give the historic nightlife hub some extra dimension. Cue, Tramp Health: a new wellness club, located on Grosvenor Square. ‘I’m Italian, and I love to drink in the evening and then to be in the gym in the morning,’ he says of the new opening. ‘People want nights they remember – energy, friendship, music, the feeling of being alive together. They also want mornings that ground them – time to work on their body, their mind, their longevity, and to do it inside a community that understands them.’
Sitting pretty on Grosvenor Square, Tramp Health is situated within the former US Embassy – and spans an impressive 16,000 sqft, with facilities including a gym, sauna, relaxation space and café. Maggiora has invested £10 million into the wellness space, enlisting the expertise of Tommaso Franchi of Tomèf Design to mastermind its design. But what can we expect from the Tramp Health interiors?
‘When Luca asked me to design Tramp Health, the intention was never to create a conventional wellness space,’ explains Franchi. ‘There was an immediate shared understanding of the importance of atmosphere, craft, and narrative to create a community space, where the physical health and inner wellbeing come together as a collective experience for all members.’
Nature proved a crucial source of inspiration for the club’s design, with Franchi drawing on organic forms that he came across in English landscapes. ‘Led by nature and the idea of belonging, the interior architecture, space-planning, and decoration were conceived as one continuous language,’ the designer adds.’ Building on a palette of earthy tones and tactile textures, design notes include clay rendered walls, timber detailing and stone accents, offset by warm lighting – as well as notes of 1970s glamour that offer plenty of nods to the famous club on Jermyn Street.
Franchi also points out that this was a project built on numerous collaborations with specialist makers and suppliers. He highlights bespoke metalwork by Cox London, clay plaster by Clay Works, timber flooring from Italian specialist Giovanni Barbieri and tiles from Mosaic factory. The space also boasts draped walling by Fortuny, furniture by Marta Sala and Bonacina, and bespoke handmade rugs by Tapistelar, creating a space that the designer dubs reminiscent of a fine residential interior.
Want to hear (and see) more? Take a look inside the interiors of Tramp Health below.
The Welcome Area
First impressions of Tramp Health start, as you would expect at the welcome entrance of the club. Here, visitors will be greeted by the reception, café and outdoor terrace. Franchi used this space to remind us of the club’s roots, with natural materials like timber and stone contrasted with stainless steel cladding inspired by Tramp’s Jermyn Street club. This naturally leads down a sculptural staircase decorated with bespoke Wilton carpet (again a node to the original club) in a moiré design that evokes visions of Keith Moon swinging from ceiling chandeliers.
Hallways have a similar sense of spacial illusion, although rooted in nature; undulating in shape, their soft curves were inspired by river paths and the dramatic cliffs of Dover.
The Oval Space
Moving on to the centre of the room, visitors come to the heart of Tramp Health. The oval space is occupied by a tall bronze-cast tree, designed by Tomèf and crafted by Cox London, which stands beneath a circadian-lit Barrisol ceiling.
It’s here that visitors will also find the clubs’s collection of lounges and mindfulness spaces. Designed to promote stillness and relaxation, these are walled with cotton fabrics and doused in warm lighting.
The Gym & Treatment Rooms
While fitness plays a key role in the new club’s universe, it’s not at the expense of quality design. Franchi designed the gym with warmth and comfort in mind, steering clear of any clinicalism that might disturb the visual flow of the club. Softness spreads to the lighting and walls, with Venetia Stadium creating a warm glow and Fortuny upholstering wall panels to contrast with the space’s more mechanical features – sparking a conversation between performance and comfort.
Digging deeper into natural influences, Tramp Health’s treatment rooms and spa spaces similarly enlist arcadian motifs and details. Massage rooms draw on the feeling of lying in a meadow, with walls covered in pastoral paintings, lush grass and flowers (as well as hand-painted artwork and tactile Listone Giordano timber flooring), while spa facilities were inspired by a grotto, with cotto tiles and rich green shrubbery decorating the space.
Bringing the outside in, the wellness hub encourages its members to enjoy the sauna, steam, cold plunge and ice bath facilities. Tramp Health also aims to support holistic health, and include diagnostics, IV therapy, yoga and pilates. Diagnostics will be led by longevity specialist Dr. Mark Mikhail, and all treatments and aesthetic services will be overseen by Libi Roos.
Membership
Members of Tramp can access the facilities for £390 a month, on top of their £2,000 a year membership – though they must first be interviewed by Maggiora. Non-members can also access the space after a meeting with Maggiora, for an annual fee of £10,000, plus a £5,000 joining fee. The wellness café and terrace opened on 1 April, and the rest of the club will follow on 1 May 2026.
Find out more about membership options at tramphealth.co.uk
All images are digital renders

















