Athletic & Fitness Facilities
The Sanitizer Members Don't Complain About
No bleach smell. No sticky residue. No fragrance complaints. Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is the same molecule your white blood cells produce to fight infection — and it's powerful enough for hospital surfaces, gentle enough to spray on mats and equipment with members in the room.
The Chemistry Difference
Hospital Chemistry, Built for Members
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is the active ingredient your immune system uses against bacteria and viruses. We make it the way your body does — by passing salt water through an electrical current — and then we put it in a bottle.
What you don't get: bleach smell, fragrance, dyes, surfactants, quats, alcohol, or a signal word on the label. What you do get: a 500 ppm hospital-grade sanitizer that kills mold, bacteria, and odor-causing organisms on contact and dries to nothing.
500 ppm
Hospital-grade HOCl concentration
pH 5.5–6.5
Skin-neutral. Won't burn eyes or bleach gear.
>99%
Electrolyzed water — the rest is salt
Why Operators Switch to D2 Athletic
The Smell Problem
Bleach drives members out of yoga studios. Quats and pine-scented disinfectants make jiu-jitsu academies smell like a hospital floor. Hot yoga rooms turn into a chemical cloud. Members can taste it on the mat — and they remember which gym smelled like a swimming pool versus which one didn't.
Residue on Mats and Foam
Quat sanitizers leave a sticky film on rubber flooring, foam mats, and grappling tatami. The film attracts dirt, breaks down the surface over time, and gives wrestlers and BJJ athletes the same skin issues you were trying to prevent. Members notice when their gi sticks to the mat.
Locker Room and Sauna Mold
Grout lines, the gap behind the bench, the inside of the vent stack — and now operators are asking about the sauna itself, where most chemicals can't safely circulate. The funk comes back two days after you clean it, and the chemical you used to clean it can't go everywhere the mold is hiding.
Where D2 Athletic Works
CrossFit Boxes & Functional Fitness
Wall balls, rowers, kettlebells, pull-up bars, rubber flooring — high-touch, multi-class, no time to ventilate between WODs. ZeroPoint sprays and air-dries while the next class is warming up.
Recommended
Jiu-Jitsu, Wrestling & MMA Mats
Staph, ringworm, and MRSA are the real fears. Daily mat sanitation that won't make a gi sticky, won't bleach a black belt, and works between classes without ventilating the room.
Recommended
Hot Yoga & Pilates Studios
A 105°F room turns any harsh chemical into a complaint generator. Hypochlorous acid is odorless, fragrance-free, and safe to spray on mats and props with members in the room.
Recommended
Locker Rooms & Showers
Grout, benches, lockers, drain lines. Spray-and-walk-away protocol with no rinse step — works on porous and non-porous surfaces, on tile and on the wood inside the lockers.
Recommended
Country Club Fitness Centers
Members complain in writing. One sanitation system that handles the gym floor, the spa locker room, the golf cart fleet, and the pool deck means fewer chemicals on premises and fewer ways for a member experience to go sideways.
Recommended
Boutique Studios & Personal Training
Cycling studios, barre, reformer Pilates, small-group HIIT. Equipment is expensive and members notice everything. A sanitizer that doesn't damage upholstery, electronics, or leather seats.
Recommended
Pool Decks & Aquatics
Lane ropes, kickboards, lifeguard chairs, deck shoes. Hypochlorous acid is what chlorinated water is trying to be — except at gentle pH and without the off-gassing.
Recommended
Golf Carts, Locker Rooms & Pro Shops
Country club operators tell us the same story: once members trust one sanitation system, they want it everywhere — including the golf cart fleet. Steering wheels, cup holders, seat fabrics, club grips. One product, one training.
Recommended
Operator Conversation
The Sauna Question
A few gym operators have asked us about treating sauna interiors and the air handler loop on the sauna itself — they suspect mold and funk, but they're (rightly) cautious about anything they put in there because it circulates back into the breathing air. We're having those conversations now. If you're dealing with sauna funk, let's compare notes — ZeroPoint's "same molecule your immune system makes" chemistry is exactly the kind of starting point that conversation deserves.
Start the Sauna ConversationCore Products for Athletic Facilities
ZeroPoint HOCl
Electrolyzed-water hypochlorous acid (HOCl). EPA registered, food-contact safe at use dilution, no fragrance, no signal word, no PPE escalation.
Hand Hygiene
Member-facing hand sanitizer stations + dispensing for front desk, locker rooms, and equipment wipe-downs.
Disinfectant Wipes
Single-use wipes for equipment members are expected to wipe themselves. No streaks on touchscreens, no damage to upholstery.
Floor Sanitation
Locker-room and shower-deck floor sanitation. Degreasing + sanitizing for sweat, oil, and chlorine residue.
Athletic Facility FAQs
Will it bleach our gear, mats, or upholstery?
No. ZeroPoint is hypochlorous acid (HOCl), not bleach (sodium hypochlorite). Bleach is alkaline (pH ~11) and oxidizes dyes. HOCl is pH 5.5–6.5 — skin-neutral — and is the same molecule your white blood cells produce. It's been used on medical wound care and food-contact surfaces without discoloration. We'll send a sample so you can spot test on a black belt or matte rubber tile.
Do we have to ventilate the room or clear members out?
No. ZeroPoint is not classified as hazardous under OSHA Hazard Communication Standard. There's no signal word on the label, no respirator requirement, and no ventilation hold time. Staff can spray equipment between classes with members in the room. The label still requires standard application discipline — wipe-up of overspray, eye-protection if you're fogging — but you don't need to clear the floor.
What does it kill — staph, MRSA, ringworm?
ZeroPoint is EPA-registered as a disinfectant and sanitizer. Hypochlorous acid is the same chemistry hospitals use for surface infection control — broad-spectrum against gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, enveloped viruses, and many fungi and molds. For specific kill claims (Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA, Trichophyton spp., norovirus, influenza), reference the current EPA label — we'll send the latest copy with any sample order.
We have members with chemical sensitivities and asthma. Is this safe for them?
ZeroPoint contains no fragrance, no dyes, no surfactants, no quats, and no alcohol. The Safety Data Sheet lists no hazard classification under GHS. That's the formulation answer. The operational answer is: members who get triggered by bleach-cleaning days or pine-scented quat sprays generally don't get triggered by ZeroPoint — it's odorless at use dilution. That said, we always recommend the gym's medical director or facility risk owner review the SDS before adopting any new chemistry, and we'll walk you through it.
Can we use the same product in the gym, the locker room, the pool deck, and the golf carts?
Yes — and this is the conversation country club operators keep coming back to us about. One product, one training, one set of MSDS paperwork at the front desk, one vendor on the AP file. From rubber gym flooring to grout, to vinyl golf cart seats, to lifeguard chairs, to the bench inside the spa locker room. The application changes (spray-and-wipe, mop, fog, soak) but the chemistry is the same.
What about the sauna interior — can we treat that?
Honest answer: we have operators asking us this same question right now. Sauna interiors get funky and most chemicals are not appropriate to circulate through a breathing-air system. ZeroPoint's chemistry — same molecule your immune system makes, no fragrance, no signal word — is a strong starting point for that conversation, but we want to do it right. If you're dealing with sauna funk, let's talk before you treat. We'll work through application method (wipe-down vs. fog vs. air-handler), dry time, and what the manufacturer of your sauna allows.
Sizing — how do we buy this for a gym chain or country club portfolio?
We sell ZeroPoint in 1-gallon, 2.5-gallon, 4×1G case, 2×2.5G case, and 275-gallon IBC tote. Single locations typically start on cases. Multi-location operators usually move to totes within 60–90 days once the team trusts the chemistry. We handle drop shipping, COA documentation, and pull-and-replace tote service for multi-property accounts.
Start with a Sample. See It on Your Mat.
We'll send a sample bottle of ZeroPoint, the current EPA label, and an SDS. Spray it on a black belt, a rubber tile, a yoga mat. Smell the room. Then we'll talk about pilot pricing for your facility.