60-Minute Strength Workout (Intermediate) — Full Gym

60-Minute strength routine with 9 exercises, suitable for intermediate trainees. Equipment profile: Full Gym.

Composed of 9 exercises — each linked to its canonical detail page with step-by-step instructions and alternatives.

Strength intermediate 60-Minute full gym

What the 60-Minute Strength Workout (Intermediate) — Full Gym Data Reveals

60-Minute Strength Workout (Intermediate) — Full Gym is a intermediate-level workout template composed of 9 catalogued exercises, built around the goal "strength" with an estimated session length of 60-Minute. The equipment profile is "full gym", and every included movement is loaded rather than bodyweight-only. Each entry is a canonical record from the Free Exercise DB — no movements are synthesised, so every click through lands on a source-backed detail page with step-by-step instructions and safety notes.

Across the 9 exercises, the session touches 5 distinct primary muscle groups — most heavily abdominals (4), shoulders (2), hamstrings (1), middle back (1). A session that hits a broad range of primary movers (roughly 4+ muscle groups) tends to function as a full-body template suited to lower frequency across the week; a narrower spread signals a split routine intended to be paired with complementary sessions. The ordering of exercises is preserved exactly as authored, because exercise sequencing — larger compound lifts typically performed before isolation work — affects both performance and injury risk.

Context matters: this is a template, not a personalised training plan. Sets, reps, load, and rest are not prescribed because appropriate values depend entirely on training age, recovery capacity, sleep, nutrition, and goals that a static page cannot know. The "intermediate" label reflects the assumed movement-pattern prerequisites, not that the template is safe at any load. This workout is general educational information, not medical or personal-training advice. Consult a physician or certified trainer before starting — especially with pre-existing injuries, cardiovascular conditions, recent surgery, or pregnancy. Sharp or joint pain is a stop signal, not a soreness signal.

Exercises (9)

  1. Ab Crunch Machine
    abdominals · machine
  2. Ab Roller
    abdominals · other
  3. Advanced Kettlebell Windmill
    abdominals · kettlebells
  4. Alternating Hang Clean
    hamstrings · kettlebells
  5. Alternating Kettlebell Press
    shoulders · kettlebells
  6. Alternating Kettlebell Row
    middle back · kettlebells
  7. Arnold Dumbbell Press
    shoulders · dumbbell
  8. Around The Worlds
    chest · dumbbell
  9. Barbell Ab Rollout
    abdominals · barbell

Before you start

  • Warm up for 5-10 minutes with light cardio and dynamic mobility work.
  • This is a template, not a personal training plan. Adjust sets, reps, rest, and load to match your recovery capacity.
  • Sharp or joint pain is a stop signal. Discontinue any exercise that causes pain.
  • General information only. Consult a physician or certified trainer before starting any new exercise program.

Source: Free Exercise DB (CC0) + wger.de (AGPL), 2026. Workouts are composed from these records by the PlainExercise pipeline. See the methodology page.

Disclaimer: General information only. Consult a physician or certified trainer before starting any new exercise program.

Related

Data sourced from official open-source exercise reference databases (wger.de, public exercise repositories). See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainExercise Editorial