Upland, CA

Fitness, health & well-being.

BiomedRx Fitness blends strength and cross-training with cardiovascular conditioning, nutrition coaching, and recovery science — all at your own pace. Founder-led programming that combines traditional resistance work with yoga, Pilates, and advanced peak-performance protocols to get the most out of yourself.

Devin Lockett, founder and head coach at BiomedRx Fitness in Upland, CA
751 W
Foothill Blvd, Upland
M-F 8:30-21:00
Weekday Hours
Sat-Sun 11:30-16:00
Weekend Hours
6
Specialty Programs

Programs that work

Get the most out of yourself. Every program blends proven training with recovery science and moves at a pace that fits your life.

Bodybuilding

Traditional weight routines combined with yoga and Pilates, plus inversion, swimming, and sauna for balanced, injury-resistant strength.

Training Intensity

A peak-performance protocol using advanced modalities including neurofeedback, cranial electrotherapy stimulation, and biomagnetic pair therapy.

Cardio

A comprehensive cardiovascular program that incorporates running, swimming, and cycling to build lasting endurance.

Strength Training

Gain strength and flexibility with a cross-training approach that gently blends yoga and Pilates with traditional resistance training.

Nutrition Coaching

Practical nutrition tips and advice built around your training so your fueling supports your goals, not fights them.

Self-Paced Coaching

Develop at your own pace with guidance every step of the way. Your improvements will come faster than you might expect.

Insights from the clinic floor

What we're learning in Upland — fitness science, member stories, and seasonal training prep.

Educational

May Metabolic Reset: Pre-Summer Training Prep and Hydration Strategies for the Inland Empire Climate

Training in the Inland Empire heat is a physiological challenge, not just a comfort issue. When ambient temperature rises, the body diverts blood flow to the skin to shed heat, which raises heart rate at any given workload and can reduce performance. Heat acclimatization — gradually increasing exposure to exercise in warm conditions over roughly one to two weeks — is a well-documented adaptation: the body learns to sweat earlier and more efficiently, expands plasma volume, and better regulates core temperature. That is why an early-season "reset" of intensity and session timing makes sense before peak summer heat arrives.

Hydration is central. The CDC and sports-medicine guidance emphasize drinking fluids before, during, and after activity in the heat and recognizing early signs of heat illness such as heavy sweating, dizziness, nausea, and muscle cramps. Because sweat carries sodium and other electrolytes, longer or more intense sessions in hot weather can warrant electrolyte replacement in addition to water — though individual needs vary with sweat rate, session length, and diet.

Practically, that means scheduling harder efforts for cooler morning or evening windows, building heat tolerance progressively rather than all at once, and monitoring how you feel rather than pushing through warning signs. This is general educational information; anyone with a medical condition or who is new to exercise should consult a healthcare provider before starting a heat-focused program.

Sources: CDC — Heat and Health; American College of Sports Medicine

May 1, 202611 min read
Informative

Transitioning From Winter Strength Gain to Spring Conditioning: The May Reset Protocol

Moving from a winter strength block to spring conditioning is a programming shift, not a teardown. Muscle and strength built over a hypertrophy or strength phase are relatively durable, and a well-designed transition preserves them while adding aerobic and metabolic conditioning. National physical-activity guidance recommends adults combine muscle-strengthening activity on two or more days per week with regular aerobic activity, so the goal in spring is to rebalance emphasis — maintain a meaningful strength stimulus while increasing conditioning volume — rather than abandon lifting altogether.

The key principle for keeping strength is maintenance training: research and ACSM guidance indicate that once fitness is built, it can often be retained with a somewhat reduced training frequency or volume as long as intensity stays high enough. In practice that can mean fewer, focused heavy sessions per week to hold strength, paired with added intervals, tempo work, or longer aerobic efforts to build conditioning.

Nutrition and recovery adjust with the workload: as conditioning volume rises and the weather warms, fueling and hydration matter more, and recovery modalities like sleep, mobility, and adequate protein support adaptation. Individual response varies, so use simple metrics — session quality, resting heart rate trends, and how lifts feel — to guide the pace of the transition. This is general educational information and not a substitute for individualized coaching or medical advice.

Sources: American College of Sports Medicine; CDC — Physical Activity Guidelines for Adults

May 7, 20268 min read
Field Notes

From Desk Job to Outdoor Athlete: How One 47-Year-Old Built His First Ultra Marathon Fitness in 10 Months

Going from a desk job and an occasional 5K to finishing a 50K ultramarathon in under a year is ambitious, and the way it works safely is through gradual, structured progression. Endurance adaptations — a stronger heart, denser capillary networks, more mitochondria, and more resilient tendons and connective tissue — develop over months, and connective tissue in particular adapts more slowly than the cardiovascular system. That mismatch is why coaches emphasize building weekly volume incrementally and treating the base-building phase as the real foundation rather than rushing to long distances.

National guidance frames the underlying principle: adults benefit from regular aerobic activity plus muscle-strengthening work, and beginners should increase load progressively to reduce injury risk. For a first ultra, that typically means many months of easy-paced mileage, a long run that grows only modestly week to week, planned recovery weeks, and strength and mobility work to protect joints. Fueling and hydration during long efforts become their own skill, practiced in training rather than improvised on race day.

Individual stories like this are inspiring but not prescriptions — training background, age, health history, and recovery capacity all shape what a safe timeline looks like. Anyone taking on a major new endurance goal, especially after a sedentary period, should build gradually and consider a medical check-in first. This is a member's experience shared for encouragement, not medical advice.

Sources: CDC — Physical Activity Guidelines for Adults; American College of Sports Medicine

May 16, 20269 min read

Visit Us

751 W. Foothill Blvd
Upland, CA 91786

Hours
Monday–Friday: 8:30 AM – 9:00 PM
Saturday–Sunday: 11:30 AM – 4:00 PM

424-204-2382

Ready to start?

Tell us about your goals and fitness history. We'll design your first assessment.

2026 Industry Update

What the latest fitness and wellness research means for how we train.

Wearables Top the 2026 Fitness Trends

The American College of Sports Medicine named wearable technology the number one fitness trend for 2026, and roughly half of U.S. adults now use a fitness tracker or smartwatch. Newer devices bring near clinical-grade heart-rate, ECG, and blood-oxygen sensing to everyday training — data we can use to personalize programming, guide recovery, and keep your progress objective.

Exercise as Medicine, Personalized

Continuous, high-resolution activity data is helping turn broad fitness advice into individualized plans. At BiomedRx Fitness, that means pairing proven strength, conditioning, and recovery work with what your own numbers show — so training adapts to you, at your own pace, through every season in the Inland Empire.

Free Guide · PDF

Training at Your Own Pace

Download our free illustrated guide — practical, current, and written for 2026.

↓ Download the eBook
Watch

Videos

Why Work With Us

The BiomedRx Fitness difference

We combine real expertise with genuine care — and we make it easy to say yes. Here is what you can expect when you work with BiomedRx Fitness.

Why work with us

Whole-person approach

Evidence-informed sessions tailored to your goals, not a one-size-fits-all script.

Trained practitioners

Experienced, credentialed providers who put your comfort and safety first.

Measured progress

Clear intake, personalized plans, and honest check-ins so you can see how far you have come.

A welcoming space

A calm, modern environment designed to help you relax, focus, and thrive.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What does BiomedRx Fitness offer?
Evidence-informed wellness services focused on the mind-body connection, delivered by trained practitioners in a comfortable setting.
Is a consultation required before starting?
Yes — we begin with an intake consultation to understand your goals and tailor a plan to you.
Are sessions suitable for everyone?
Most healthy adults are good candidates. We review your history first and coordinate with your physician when appropriate.
How do I get started?
Reach us at (424) 204-2382 or info@biomedrxfitness.com to book your first session.
Devin Lockett, Founder
About the Founder

Devin Lockett

Devin Lockett is the founder and entrepreneur behind this venture and the wider BiomedRx family of companies—spanning healthcare technology, wellness, media, and community initiatives. He builds brands focused on quality, service, and independent ownership.

More from Devin Lockett: devinlockett.com · devinlockett.tv · devinlockett.ai · 424-204-2382

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