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Pilates Studios in Prospect Heights

4 studios · 25% classical · 50% contemporary · Drop-in $0-0 · Learn more about Pilates in Prospect Heights ↓

Chelsea Piers Fitness

Prospect Heights · 4.0 (104 Google reviews)
Contemporary Mat Only $$$$

Studio Pilates International Prospect Heights

Prospect Heights · 4.9 (87 Google reviews)
Contemporary Reformer Back Pain Postnatal Prenatal Beginner Friendly $$

The Fours Studio

Prospect Heights · 5.0 (12 Google reviews)
Classical Mat Only Beginner Friendly $$

Violet Hour Pilates Studio

Prospect Heights · 4.8 (21 Google reviews)
Mixed Reformer Post-Rehab Postnatal Prenatal Seniors Beginner Friendly $$
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About Pilates in Prospect Heights

Prospect Heights has 6 Pilates studios. Method mix splits exactly 50% classical and 50% contemporary, with no mixed-method studios listed — the same shape Carroll Gardens carries across its own 6 studios. Brooklyn borough-wide reads 18% classical, 53% contemporary, and 29% mixed, so Prospect Heights carries a classical share well above borough average and no mixed-method presence. Drop-in prices across Brooklyn typically run $35 to $44 for a group class, and Prospect Heights sits inside that band. Format varies by studio — classical studios more often run full-apparatus group sessions, while contemporary studios more often run reformer-class formats. Prospect Heights sits within the Brooklyn sub-region; it shares the 6-studio tier with Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, and Crown Heights, behind Williamsburg (25), Greenpoint (11), Park Slope (9), Boerum Hill (7), and Bedford-Stuyvesant (7).

Data snapshot: May 5, 2026

Where does Prospect Heights sit in the Brooklyn density picture?

Prospect Heights' 6 studios put it in the third tier of Brooklyn neighborhoods for Pilates density, behind Williamsburg (25), Greenpoint (11), Park Slope (9), Boerum Hill (7), and Bedford-Stuyvesant (7). It shares the 6-studio tier with Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, and Crown Heights. Below this tier sits Fort Greene at 5, then several smaller neighborhoods at 3-4 each. The Brooklyn sub-region page on this site lists every studio across all of these neighborhoods together; each neighborhood with at least 3 studios also has its own page.

Why is the classical share in Prospect Heights so much higher than the borough average?

Three of the six Prospect Heights studios identify within classical-lineage training. That works out to 50% classical, well above Brooklyn's 18% borough average. The data shows the pattern but does not explain it. Carroll Gardens carries the same 50/50/0 shape across its own 6 studios, so Prospect Heights isn't unique. For someone wanting classical-lineage training, both neighborhoods are reasonable starting points; the classical vs. contemporary guide covers what each tradition emphasizes.