Most home tours are about the house. This one is about the garage.
It belongs to Dom Iacovone, the founder behind Raw Nutrition and Relive Health, and one of the more aggressive operators in the supplement and wellness-clinic space. The main residence is on the same property. The pool is new. The whole thing was built out from a 3,500-square-foot shell.
But the building Dom calls his pride and joy is the secondary structure: a multi-zone garage that functions as car storage, training space, gun room, office, and recovery suite, depending on which door you open.
Here's the walkthrough.
The Driveway
Worth pausing on before you even walk in. The garage has its own secondary driveway off the main one, with matching pavers and a low wall that drops down along the elevation change.
The same oak trees from the front drive line the path. The intent was for the building to feel like it had always been there, and the landscaping does most of that work before you ever step inside.
The Car Barn
The main floor of the garage is the car barn. Dom went with an epoxy-spec floor instead of polished concrete after living with polished in an older garage and not loving how it wore over time.
The room is now clearly storing more cars than originally planned. Dom says it directly: he underestimated how much storage he would need. Individual cars get their own videos, but the architecture is built around them here: high ceiling, white volume, enough brightness to make black paint read like liquid.
The wood-slatted walls are the first real signature. They repeat in the gym zone, and they hide doors flush enough that the wall looks solid until one of them swings open.
The Gym Zone
Tucked into a corner of the same building, separated by the slatted wood wall, is the training zone. The kit is deliberately minimal. Dom's framing is that he does not train the way he used to, and most of his cardio now happens on the bikes and treadmills.
The room has two stationary bikes and two treadmills, because his wife trains with him. There is a StairMaster, a holdover from older bodybuilding days. There is a Pit Shark, which gives him a belt-squat / hip-extension pattern without loading the spine. There is a glute machine, flagged as Sammy's favorite piece in the room.
The wall also carries a built-in Raw protein fridge. It is exactly the kind of detail that would feel corny in someone else's garage and completely normal here.
The bulk of the equipment came through Pure Muscle. The white wall sections are temporary. Full-length mirrors are going in, so the room eventually reads wood slat to mirror around the perimeter.
The Gun Room
Behind one of the hidden doors in the gym wall is the gun room. Dom describes shooting as a hobby he picked up two or three years ago and then fully disappeared into.
The collection is organized by use case, not pure display logic: daily-carry pieces, tactical collectibles, long guns, hunting guns, and a few pieces still waiting on approvals. The room reads less like a decorative wall and more like a working collection with a place for everything.
The more important note is why it exists. Dom talks about shooting as a hobby that got serious quickly, and about the collection as something he wants to pass down to his son. That shifts the room from flex to archive.
The hidden door matters because it changes the room from display case to vault. The collection is visible only when you mean to see it.
The Office
Up the stairs is the office. Dom calls it slightly too small in retrospect, which is useful because it is exactly the kind of room most people would over-praise after building it.
The aesthetic brief was earthy cabin vibes: green walls, with the trim painted the same color instead of defaulting to white. Small move, big effect. The room reads more like a study than a corporate office.
One wall has a window that switches between clear and frosted on a wall toggle. That is the stealth upgrade of the room: natural light when you want it, privacy when you need it, no blinds dragging the room back into office-park territory.
Behind the desk, in the Zoom-call frame, sit two pieces. The Inc. 5000 #1 CPG brand award, after Raw Nutrition was ranked the top consumer-packaged-goods company in America by growth in 2024, around 17,644%. And a framed Forbes article from 2022 covering an Orange Theory founder taking a small stake in Relive Health.
Dom's read on the Forbes piece is the best part: he did not know what he was doing in 2022, and the article being published anyway is proof that being in Forbes does not mean someone has anything figured out. A self-roast disguised as wall decor. It works.
The Bathroom
Off the office is the bathroom. Full stone wall on one side, large-format black tile on the other, matching tile in the shower.
Dom is currently replicating the design in his main house, which is the quietest kind of endorsement. Not a tour flex. Just: this worked, so I am doing it again where I actually live.
The Recovery Suite
The recovery suite is Dom's self-described favorite room in the building. That tracks. Cars get the square footage, but recovery gets the ritual.
The room has a built-in sauna, a cold plunge, NormaTec leg sleeves, and a Theragun. There is also a dedicated massage room, separate from the main recovery area, with a licensed massage therapist who comes in twice a week.
The meaningful design choice is keeping recovery in its own zone of the garage instead of tucking it into the house or stuffing it into the corner of the gym. It signals that recovery is not something done in passing. It gets a room.
The Yard
Technically outside the garage, but part of the same build. The original pool did not fit Dom's plans, so a friend designed a new one to work as a training pool, lounging space, and entertainment centerpiece.
The features are doing multiple jobs: sun shelves that double as a hot tub on one end, lily-pad stepping stones across the surface, a sunken gas fire pit behind the pool, and a full outdoor kitchen because Dom describes himself as part of a big Italian family that hosts often.
The pool is Olympic-length in spirit, because Dom got into triathlon training and wanted real lap distance without turning the yard into a municipal natatorium. That is the balance the whole property is chasing: serious use, still good-looking.
What's Actually Worth Stealing
Match the secondary driveway to the primary. Same pavers, same landscape language, same level of intent. That is the difference between a garage that looks original and one that looks bolted on later.
Hide doors inside wall paneling. Wood slats are especially good at this. The payoff is disproportionate because the room stays visually calm until the door opens.
Paint trim the same color as the walls. The office works because the green wraps the whole room. White trim would have made it feel generic immediately.
Use switchable frosted glass before blinds. Privacy and natural light without hanging fabric or killing the wall.
Give recovery its own room. Sauna, cold plunge, compression, massage. You can do all of it in a corner, but a dedicated zone makes the routine feel like part of the building.
The Throughline
The Iacovone garage is not trying to be wellness optimization or longevity science. It is a builder's building, designed by someone who likes cars, guns, training, and quiet places to take Zoom calls, all under one roof.
The throughline is that every zone earns its space. Nothing is decorative. The car barn stores cars, the gym gets used, the gun room is a working collection, the office has a desk that closes seventeen-thousand-percent growth deals.
A lot of luxury garages are storage units with finishes. This one functions like a second house with the doors hidden behind the wood slats.
Original video
Dream garage, mancave, gym, office, and recovery suite tour
The source tour is embedded here for context; original credit and the YouTube page are linked below.
Compound commentary and curation. Original video, facility tour, and source imagery by Dom Iacovone.
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