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An Olympic gold medalist is expanding her chain of gymnastics academies to South Jersey

And there’s plans for more locations throughout the Philly area.

Dominique Dawes (second from left) was part of the "Magnificent Seven" at the 1996 Olympics and has since built a chain of gymnastics academies.
Dominique Dawes (second from left) was part of the "Magnificent Seven" at the 1996 Olympics and has since built a chain of gymnastics academies.Read moreJOHN GAPS III / AP

Olympic gold medalist Dominique Dawes will expand her chain of gymnastics academies to Mount Laurel in September.

The South Jersey location, at 1180 Nixon Drive in the East Gate Square shopping center, is the first effort in Dawes’ planned expansion into the Philadelphia area. She plans to open five or six additional gyms in the coming years, according to Philadelphia Business Journal.

Along with the Mount Laurel location, Dawes, who’s from Silver Spring, Md., also is opening a second location in the Houston area in August. Her first academy opened in Clarksburg, Md., in July 2020, and there currently are six locations across Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, and Texas.

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Dawes is a three-time Olympian who competed at the 1992, 1996, and 2000 Games. She made history as the first Black American woman to win an individual Olympic medal in gymnastics with a bronze medal on the floor exercise in the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. She also helped win team gold at those same 1996 Games when her teammate Kerri Strug famously completed her vault exercise on an injured ankle. The “Magnificent Seven” was the first United States women’s gymnastics team to win a team gold at the Olympics. Dawes also won team bronze in 1992 in Barcelona and 2000 in Sydney.

Now a mother of four, Dawes has spoken publicly about the toxicity she endured during her career and how she doesn’t want her children — or any other children — to experience the same. Instead, she hopes to redefine the culture of the sport through her string of academies that have an estimated 7,000 students ranging from toddlers to 18-year-olds.

“We’re trying to do things differently,” Dawes said in an interview with Capital B Atlanta. “It means nothing if your child is a great gymnast — standing on top of the podium — but yet, their self-esteem is shot, their mental health is shot, and they don’t know how to make relationships in this world. I believe that if that is the outcome, then we’ve failed.”

Plans for expansion into the Philly area don’t include specifics on locations yet, but the Philadelphia Business Journal reported that proximity to families is a large factor in Dawes finding spaces for the gyms.

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