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ProKicks Martial Arts Academy

On Tampa Ave in Reseda, ProKicks Martial Arts Academy appears to run family-focused taekwondo classes—kids’ programs, teen and adult training, belt testing, and a free-trial offer. The public record also shows a high rating and a small team of instructors.

The Story So Far

On Tampa Ave in Reseda, 7632 points toward a neighborhood dojo where families might drop off after school, adults squeeze in an evening workout, and small groups gather for belt testing and practice. The address suggests a local rhythm: weekday classes, monthly events, and parents who watch progress over months and years. It is easy to imagine kids in bright belts and adults looking for fitness and stress relief — the online footprint frames the place as both a training space and a community program.

The public record for ProKicks Martial Arts Academy includes a website that describes taekwondo-focused programming and a promise to build confidence, discipline, and leadership. The site lists a team of instructors — Master Robie Bakhos, Master Siroj Ziyoviddin, Juan Carlos Becerril, and Fernanda Zandarin — and highlights class divisions like "Excellent Kids," "Tiny Tigers," teen, and adult classes. A free-class sign-up and mentions of belt testing and personalized training point toward a studio that markets itself as family-oriented and developmental.

The data available also gives a reputational hint: the academy appears in local search data with a high rating (4.9) from dozens of reviewers, which suggests repeat customers and word-of-mouth. That said, a fuller human account — what Master Robie and the instructors care about day to day, which families make this their long-term choice, and how the academy adapts to city rhythms — would come from conversations with people who run and attend the school.

What This Place Seems To Offer The Neighborhood

ProKicks appears to serve several local needs at once: after-school structure for children, teen and adult fitness, and a place for learning discipline and leadership. The website emphasizes mental as well as physical benefits — focus, problem solving, and stress management — so the academy likely positions itself as a place for life skills as much as kicks and forms.

The daypart picture is familiar: afternoons and early evenings that feel busiest with kids and families, and later classes that cater to adults looking for a workout or stress relief. Monthly events and belt evaluations suggest a measured progression that families can follow over time. The named instructors point to an organized team rather than a single-teacher operation, which could matter for parents who want consistent coaching and coverage.

Practical Details

Follow-Up Questions

  • How did ProKicks begin at this Tampa Ave location, and what was the original idea for the school?
  • Which classes and dayparts are busiest, and who are the regulars the instructors know by name?
  • How do the instructors measure progress beyond belt color — what milestones matter most to families?
  • Do school-aged students use ProKicks as after-school activity, and how does the academy coordinate with local schools and schedules?
  • Why are there two phone numbers in public records, and what is the best way for a new family to book the advertised free class?

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