Home Workout Designer

Designs customized bodyweight and minimal-equipment home workouts tailored to your space, equipment, time, fitness level, and noise constraints.

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openclaw skills install home-workout-designer

Home Workout Designer

⚠️ Educational only. This skill does not replace a certified personal trainer, physiotherapist, or medical professional. Consult a doctor before starting any exercise program. The user is responsible for their own safety during home exercise — ensure adequate floor space, remove tripping hazards, and stop immediately if you feel pain, dizziness, or discomfort.

Description

Creates effective bodyweight and minimal-equipment workouts for people training at home or while traveling. Designs sessions that fit your space, equipment, time, and noise constraints — no gym required.

What This Skill Does

This skill walks you through a structured conversation to design a home workout plan tailored to your specific living situation. It considers:

  • Available space — living room, hotel room, balcony, or small apartment
  • Available equipment — bodyweight-only, resistance bands, dumbbells, a chair, or a pull-up bar
  • Time per session — 10-minute express workouts to full 60-minute sessions
  • Fitness level and goal — beginner to advanced, strength to endurance to mobility
  • Noise and floor constraints — apartment-friendly (low-impact, no jumping) options

Required Inputs

To give you the best plan, the skill will ask:

  1. Available space — How much room do you have to move? (e.g., yoga mat area, full living room, hotel room)
  2. Available equipment — What do you have? (e.g., none, resistance bands, dumbbells, a chair, a pull-up bar)
  3. Time per session — How many minutes can you commit per workout?
  4. Fitness level and goal — Beginner, intermediate, or advanced? Strength, endurance, fat loss, general fitness?
  5. Noise or floor constraints — Do you need quiet exercises? Apartment living with downstairs neighbors?

Prompt Flow

  1. Clarify constraints — Space, equipment, time, and quietness requirements.
  2. Design sessions — Build each session to fit within your available time and equipment.
  3. Suggest progressions — Offer bodyweight progressions for different fitness levels (e.g., knee push-up → full push-up → decline push-up).
  4. Offer alternatives — Provide travel or small-space modifications for every exercise.
  5. Warm-up and cool-down — Provide equipment-free warm-up and cool-down routines.

Output Structure

Each plan includes:

  • Session-by-session workout plan — Specific exercises for each training day
  • Exercise list with rep or time targets — Clear sets, reps, or timed intervals
  • Warm-up and cool-down flow — 5–10 minutes each, no equipment needed
  • Progression ideas — How to make exercises harder as you improve
  • Travel or space-constrained modifications — Alternatives when space or equipment is limited

Exercise Selection Principles

Every exercise in your plan will:

  • Be executable in the stated space with the stated equipment
  • Have a bodyweight-only alternative available
  • Account for noise constraints (low-impact options when needed)
  • Be appropriate for unsupervised home execution (no spotting required)
  • Include progressions for at least three fitness levels (beginner, intermediate, advanced)

Sample Exercise Categories

Bodyweight Lower Body

  • Bodyweight squats, split squats, glute bridges, reverse lunges, wall sits

Bodyweight Upper Body

  • Push-ups (knee, standard, decline, diamond), pike push-ups, tricep dips (chair)

Bodyweight Core

  • Planks (standard, side, forearm), dead bugs, bird dogs, mountain climbers

Band-Resisted Options

  • Banded squats, band rows (door anchor), banded glute bridges, band pull-aparts

Dumbbell Options (if available)

  • Goblet squats, dumbbell rows, floor press, Romanian deadlifts, overhead press

Safety Boundaries

  1. Not a replacement for professionals — Does not replace a certified personal trainer, physiotherapist, or medical professional.
  2. No injury rehabilitation — Does not address rehabilitation for injuries or medical conditions.
  3. Unsupervised home safety — Exercises are selected to be safe for solo home execution.
  4. Environment safety — Always ensure adequate floor space, remove tripping hazards, and use stable surfaces for any supported exercises.
  5. User responsibility — The user is responsible for their own safety, proper form, and knowing when to stop.
  6. Medical clearance — Consult a doctor before starting a new exercise program, especially if you have any pre-existing conditions.

When to Stop and Seek Help

Stop exercising immediately and consult a healthcare professional if you experience:

  • Sharp or sudden pain
  • Dizziness, lightheadedness, or shortness of breath beyond normal exertion
  • Chest pain or pressure
  • Joint pain that persists after exercise
  • Any unusual symptoms that concern you