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    Ridge Top Club

    5.0 (1 review)

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    8 years ago

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    North Haven Health & Racquet

    North Haven Health & Racquet

    3.3
    (33 reviews)
    1.9 mi

    Toured this place recently when considering joining…read more The facility is in terrible condition. It's huge, and the options for tennis are really good. But, it seems like the place needs a major overhaul, inside and out. Not for me.

    I used to go to this gym because it was close to my house and they offered a 3 month membership,…read moremaking it a lot easier to sign up without having to worry about a full year of going to the gym. I would come a few times a week and each and every single time I would come, middle schoolers and young kids would be all over the place, goofing off on equipment and slamming the weights on machines. They were loud, obnoxious, and disruptive to many guests, including myself. When they did workout on the machines, they never cleaned them off and would leave messes all over the place. When I asked staff if they could have a word with the middle schoolers, they dismissed me and made me feel like I was in the wrong for trying to keep environment of the place open. The middle schoolers would just lounge around on equipment and ignore people when they asked if they could use the machines that they were just treating as chairs, or they would be in the middle of a workout space filming TikToks. More than once, I also went out to my car after a workout to find the middle schoolers sitting on people's cars and vaping. The staff at the front desk is extremely hit or miss. Sometimes you luck out and get someone nice that says hello/goodbye when you're coming or going, but most times, either no one is there or no one even bothers to look up from their phone. Many other guests also treat the place like an absolute garbage dump as well. People will leave machines without wiping them down or they'll just leave weights in the middle of the room. I've witnessed people working out on treadmills without shoes or socks on and the smell coming from them was quite ripe. Others completely disregard the concept of common courtesy and will blast music from their phones without headphones, despite numerous signs around the building saying that headphones are required. Others will talk loudly on the phone, disrupting workouts, too. I let my membership for this place expire and I do not plan on coming back any time soon, at least not until management does something about the middle schoolers goofing off, the patrons with no regard for their surroundings, or the terrible service at the front desk.

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    Group Ex Class
    Group Ex Class
    2017 Member Appreciation Day!
    2017 Member Appreciation Day!
    One of our 5 Racquetball Courts

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    One of our 5 Racquetball Courts
    New Haven Lawn Club

    New Haven Lawn Club

    4.4
    (47 reviews)
    3.7 mi

    The New Haven Lawn Club is absolutely gorgeous!! The employees here do an amazing job keeping the…read morefacility clean and tidy. Everyone here is very nice. The facility has clean bathrooms, is HUGE - and it looks like it has so much history here. Wonderful for a work outing or a wedding!!

    My stay the New Haven Lawn Club on a family visit to Connecticut yielded a positive impression of…read morethe accommodations, hospitable staff, dining and recreation facilities. A 5-star private social club in the Platinum Clubs of America, it is situated on Whitney Avenue near the Yale University campus, and two blocks from Ingalls Rink and State Street (home to Modern Apizza, our favorite in the Pizza Capital of the World). The New Haven Lawn Club offers five comfortable, spacious overnight guest rooms and one suite, a main dining room seating 200, and a grand ballroom seating 300 that was being used for a wedding reception the night we stayed there. The fitness center and four squash courts are open 24x7. Outdoors, there is a pool, toddler pool, eight Hart-tru tennis courts, two paddle courts and a playground. Guests enjoy free parking and wifi. We enjoyed pre-game cocktails in the bar off the Grill Room, accommodating 100, where lunch and dinner are served Wednesday-Saturday, and where seasonal Sunday brunch and supper are available. A unique feature of the club is art exhibits hung in the rotunda outside the Grill Room. Rebuilt in 1931 after a fire destroyed the original two years earlier, the clubhouse was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2003. It also is designated A New Haven Landmark by the New Haven Preservation Trust.

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    Hall
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    Yale

    Yale

    4.3
    (3 reviews)
    5.1 mi

    Perfect weather for today's game at the Yale bowl in New Haven. Yale hosted Princeton for its last…read morehome game of the season. The crowd was small but very well behaved. Yale won the game with a score of 42 to 28.

    Yale has 18 national championships that are recognized by the NCAA. The Bulldogs have the most…read moretitles of any college football program in history. That said, those championships were won a long time ago, before the modern era: 1874, 1876, 1877, 1880, 1881, 1882, 1883, 1884, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1891, 1892, 1894, 1900, 1907, 1909, and 1927. Yale and the other Ivy League football teams moved down to NCAA Division I-AA in 1982 (I-AA's first season was in 1978). Since 2006, I-AA officially became known as the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). Again, a step below where the bigger programs reside. For example, Alabama, Notre Dame, Michigan, and Southern California play in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). Before college football grew and evolved into what it is today, Yale was king. An important distinction to make between Ivy League football programs and FBS programs is no school from the Ivy League awards football scholarships. However, student-athletes can receive needs-based scholarships in the Ivy League. In general, Yale and the other Ivy League football schools have significantly smaller programs when compared to those in the FBS, hence their classification as FCS members. Since joining the Ivy League in 1956, Yale has won 16 conference championships. Unlike FBS conferences where there is a conference championship game, the Ivy League has no such thing. Therefore, it is possible to have co-champions in the league. Five of Yale's last six conference titles were shared. Since becoming the current Bulldogs head coach in 2012, Tony Reno has been responsible for two of those championships: 2017 outright (9-1 overall, 6-1 Ivy) and 2019 co-champions with Dartmouth (both schools went 9-1 overall, 6-1 Ivy). I'm not sure the reasons why, but the Ivy League chooses not to participate in the NCAA Division I Football Championship playoffs. Therefore, they do not presently have the opportunity to compete for national championships that are sanctioned and recognized by the NCAA. Yale's home football stadium, the Yale Bowl, is the biggest in the Ivy League with a seating capacity of 61,446. Opened in 1914, it's the third-oldest venue in the conference. It is located west of Yale's main campus, on the other side of Ella T Grasso Blvd, with some of the school's other athletic facilities such as Reese Stadium (soccer) and the tennis complex.

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    Yale
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    Ridge Top Club - swimmingpools - Updated July 2026

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