Kinnelon launches sunset-friendly outdoor yoga series this summer
Kinnelon’s new Golden Hour Yoga series brings an eight-week sunset practice to the borough hall green, with all ages welcome and drop-ins at $18.

Kinnelon is turning a Tuesday evening on the town green into a summer wellness ritual. Golden Hour Yoga, a new outdoor series from Kinnelon Recreation and Zehn Space Wellness, began June 16 at the green at Kinnelon Borough Hall and is set to run for eight weeks through August 4.
The classes are scheduled for Tuesday nights from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., a late-summer window that makes the series feel built for the end of the workday rather than a rigid studio appointment. The format is open to all ages and skill levels, including first-timers and returning practitioners, which places the program squarely in the borough’s broader push for accessible recreation rather than niche fitness.
The pricing is equally approachable. Drop-in attendance costs $18, a four-class pack is $60, and the full eight-class summer series is $96. The full series brings the per-class cost down and gives the program a repeatable rhythm, the kind of weekly commitment that can turn into a habit over the course of a season.
Sarah A. Armaghan, founder of Zehn Space Wellness, led the series. Armaghan’s public bio identifies her as a Licensed Associate Counselor in New Jersey and a yoga instructor who integrates clinical mental health principles with embodied practices, which gives the program a therapeutic cast as well as a movement-based one. Zehn Space Wellness describes its work in Kinnelon as personalized wellness through yoga, meditation and coaching, and its booking page confirms Golden Hour Yoga as an outdoor summer series on Tuesday evenings at the borough hall green with all levels welcome.

The borough has framed the class as part of a larger recreation mission. Its recreation materials say the department is striving to expand programs to accommodate all ages and abilities and aims to enhance residents’ quality of life through enriching activities and events. With the Recreation Commission meeting at Borough Hall, the green next door fits naturally into the town’s existing public-life calendar.
That is what gives Golden Hour Yoga its appeal: not a specialized studio experience, but a low-friction community class at sunset, on familiar ground, where a neighbor can roll out a mat, stay for an hour and make it part of the summer routine.
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