Your community hub for fitness, fun, and family wellness in North Richland Hills.
The NRH Centre is a premier community recreation facility offering a wide range of amenities for all ages. With a state-of-the-art fitness center, indoor aquatic park featuring a lap pool, slide, and splash pad, and diverse programs like classes and birthday parties, we provide an affordable and welcoming environment for health and leisure. Managed by the City of North Richland Hills, we strive to be a vibrant hub where families and individuals can stay active, socialize, and thrive.
Features a lap pool, water slide, splash pad, walking river, and hot tub for family fun and swimming activities.
Equipped with new machines, free weights, and an indoor track for walking or jogging to support all fitness levels.
Offers a variety of classes to help members achieve their health goals in a supportive community setting.
Provides well-equipped party rooms and aquatic access for memorable celebrations with friendly staff assistance.
Includes swim lessons, sports activities, and recreational programs tailored for different age groups.
Love the gym but don't expect the pool and especially the hot tub to be open. It's seemingly always closed 'for repairs.' Call ahead is my suggestion if you want to use the pool/hot tub.
This is our home gym! They have everything we need and a pool/swim activity area for kids and adults. They offer classes and have an indoor track upstairs for walking or jogging. The machines are new and in great condition and the free weights are great as well. It’s affordable too!
I’ve been a member at the NRH Centre since 2018 and it has gone steadily downhill over the years. I want to be transparent and say that I actually reviewed this gym a few years ago and gave it 4 stars. I’ve since deleted that review and I’m writing this new one to reflect the last couple of years here, because things have changed a lot. What used to feel like a community gym now often feels like an after school dumping ground for the nearby high school. The weight room is the worst part. Most afternoons you get packs of high school jocks rolling in with tripods, ring lights, phones out, filming their “influencer” workouts, taking over multiple machines, spreading gear everywhere, cussing, yelling, acting rowdy and making other people obviously uncomfortable. It doesn’t feel like a normal gym environment anymore. It feels like a loud, unsupervised teen hangout that paying adult members just have to work around. This isn’t a one time thing. It’s a regular pattern. I’ve talked to staff about it more than once. I want to be fair here and say some staff members are great. They listen, they take concerns seriously, and they actually walk back to the weight room and try to calm things down. They usually do it quietly and discreetly, not making a big scene, and they show respect to everyone involved, including the teens they’re talking to. I really appreciate those employees and this review is not aimed at them. The problem is that it’s hit or miss. Sometimes you get someone helpful who clearly cares, other times nothing really happens and the same behavior keeps going. Consistency with the policies and procedures they already have in place feels spotty at best. The rules get enforced in a very random way. That’s why this feels like a management and policy problem, not a “bad staff” problem. Clear, effective policies and procedures, actually followed, would give staff something solid to point to so the rules are applied fairly and equally for everyone. I also want to be clear I’m not writing this just to trash the place. I want management to take this seriously and fix it. I get that teens are teens. They’re going to be loud sometimes and they deserve a place to work out too. That’s fine. But there has to be some structure so everyone can feel comfortable and safe in a gym they’re paying for. A few ideas that would help a lot: 1. Set clear behavior rules in the weight room and post them where everyone can see them, then actually follow them. 2. Limit or ban tripods and filming gear during peak after school hours. If people want to film, give them a small designated corner and keep it out of main walkways and machines. 3. Have staff physically present in the weight room during those busy after school times, not just up at the front desk. 4. Follow through with real consequences for repeat offenders so the rules actually mean something. I know this place is run by the City of North Richland Hills. NRH Centre Manager Garrett Peek and Parks & Recreation Director Adrien Pekurney should be very aware of what the weight room actually looks and sounds like after school most days. If this is the kind of atmosphere they want to offer, they should just say so. If not, then it’s time to put a real plan in place and stick with it. My membership is coming up for renewal and I’m seriously thinking about leaving and finding another gym. I would honestly rather stay, but only if these issues are actually addressed. Anyone considering a membership should think about whether they want to deal with this scene every time they just want to come in, workout, and go home.
We mainly joined to go to the indoor water park and splash pad. It's not very big compared to other indoor aquatic centers. But, they have a spiraling slide, walking river, and 3-lane lap pool. They also have a pretty large spa. Most of the water levels are 3 feet, 6 inches. The deepest part is 9 feet where the rock climbing wall is located.
We just celebrated a birthday party 🥳 at NRH Centre and I only have great things to say. The party rooms are excellent, warm and well equipped. The guys at the front desk were very friendly with all of my guests and the lifeguards in the kiddie pool/slide did awesome at keeping all those kids in check 😀👀. Thank you so much! I’ll be back! ⚙️
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