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For Wellness Studios
Wide open.
- Only one Wellness Studio spot in Bucksburn
- Your business, top of the pile - no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Wellness Studios
A wellness studio runs classes and group sessions in yoga, pilates, barre, breathwork and similar disciplines - with regular timetables and small-group instruction in a dedicated space.
Studios often run drop-in passes alongside class blocks and memberships; look for instructors with recognised qualifications (Yoga Alliance UK, REPs, Body Control Pilates) for any practice you'll do regularly.
If you're managing an injury, mention it before booking - good studios will adapt the class or point you to a specialist physio or sports therapist where the studio isn't the right fit.
- yoga studio
- pilates studio
- wellness centre
- fitness studio
- barre class
About Bucksburn
Bucksburn lies in the north-west of Aberdeen City, positioned along the valley of the Bucks Burn. Once a small village centred on paper milling, it has been absorbed into Aberdeen's suburban spread while retaining a sense of its own identity.
The area has a mix of housing stock, from traditional granite terraces to post-war council housing and newer private developments. Bucksburn Academy serves the local school-age population.
Bucksburn benefits from its proximity to major employment areas at Dyce and the airport. The A96 runs through the district, providing a direct road corridor northwest toward Inverurie.
The Formartine and Buchan Way is accessible nearby and the area is close to the countryside fringe of Aberdeen.
About Aberdeen
Aberdeen is Scotland's third-largest city, built where the rivers Dee and Don meet the North Sea on the north-east coast. Known as the Granite City for the distinctive silvery stone used in much of its architecture, Aberdeen has a visual character unlike any other Scottish city - handsome, austere and striking in its uniformity.
The city has been shaped by successive waves of industry: fishing and shipbuilding gave way to textiles and paper-making and from the 1970s the discovery of North Sea oil transformed Aberdeen into the energy capital of Europe. The oil industry brought international investment, a cosmopolitan population and decades of prosperity.
Union Street, the mile-long granite backbone of the city centre, connects the historic Castlegate to the west end, while the waterfront has been reimagined with new developments along the harbour and beach. The city has two universities - the University of Aberdeen, founded in 1495 and Robert Gordon University - and a large teaching hospital at Foresterhill.
Aberdeen's neighbourhoods are diverse: the leafy western suburbs of Cults, Milltimber and Bieldside along the Dee; the northern suburbs of Bridge of Don and Dyce near the airport; the inner-city character of Rosemount and Old Aberdeen; and the south-side communities of Torry and Kincorth.
Transport connections include Aberdeen International Airport at Dyce, a main-line railway station with services to Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness and London and the Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route which has transformed road access around the city.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.