This listing isn't a gym. Google categorizes it as a tram stop, and every one of its five written reviews describes a Stockholm neighborhood spot, not a fitness facility - a park with cherry blossoms, a craft beer hall, and the tram platform itself.
What's Actually Here
Nadiia Tyshchenko, May 2022, describes a park: "Here in Luma it is like a park of sakura trees. It is much better than in Kungstradgarden, because not a lot of people there and you can make obvious photos." Johan Scherman, the same month, is more critical of the same space: "A really nice little park bursting between the houses, but somehow the feeling doesn't really want to lift. I think the huge sales booth in the middle of the square takes away a lot of the cozy feeling." Two visitors, the same month, describing the same small park very differently - one drawn to its quiet cherry blossoms, one bothered by a market stall crowding the square.
Guido Gun, August 2018, describes something else entirely: "Beer brewing factory on the sea side near Sodermalm neighborhood. Complete selection of local crafted beers. You can also have burgers." And Chris, April 2026 - the newest review here - describes the tram stop itself: "As tram stops go, Luma is top tier. Good protection from the wind, cafes and restaurants nearby, plus great access to the waterfront."
Why This Matters If You're Looking for a Gym
If you found this page searching for somewhere to train, none of it applies. There's no mention of equipment, classes, memberships, or anything resembling fitness in any of the five reviews. What's actually at this location, according to the people who left reviews, is a small park, a nearby brewery, cafes, and a well-regarded public transit stop in Stockholm's Luma district. I'd treat this listing as a mismatched entry in a fitness directory rather than a gym with a confusing name - there's no fitness angle to correct toward, because none of the source material describes one.
What the Reviews Actually Tell You
Taniya Halder, June 2023, keeps it simple: "It is very beautiful place during the summer." Combined with Nadiia's account of cherry blossoms and Johan's more mixed take on the park's proportions, the picture that emerges is a small, pleasant public square worth visiting for its own sake - in spring for the sakura trees, any season for the brewery and cafes nearby, and generally as a well-sheltered spot to catch a tram.
What's Missing
Nothing here answers a fitness question, because none of the five reviewers are describing a fitness venue. No price, no hours beyond general transit use, and no confirmation that this location has ever had any connection to exercise or training.
Who It's Not For
Anyone looking for a gym. I want to be direct about that: this is a public square and tram stop in Stockholm, and every review confirms it.
120 61 Stockholm, Sweden. No phone number or website is published for this location.
FAQ
Is this a gym?
No. It's categorized as a tram stop, and every written review describes a park, a nearby brewery, or the transit stop itself - nothing related to fitness.
What is actually at this location?
A small park known for cherry blossoms in spring, a craft beer hall nearby, cafes and restaurants, and a tram stop that one reviewer specifically praises for its shelter from the wind.
Is the park worth visiting?
Reviewers disagree. One calls it more peaceful than Stockholm's famous Kungstradgarden gardens; another finds the proportions between greenery, stone, and pavement unsatisfying, and singles out a market stall for crowding the square.
Can I get food or drinks nearby?
Yes - one reviewer describes a beer brewing facility with local craft beer and burgers, and another mentions cafes and restaurants near the tram stop.