Germany’s Vitronic has mastered imaging across several industries, but its latest innovation targets athletes, debuting its 3D body scanning technology at the Legacy Sports Complex in Milton, Georgia.
The device, dubbed BodyLoop, generates a digital twin of an athlete in under a second and can capture imbalances, track physical changes over time and inform everything from training adjustments to return-to-sport timelines.
“To have athletes and sports teams perform at their best when it counts, precise monitoring and assessment methods for their physical changes and body status are essential,” Vitronic sales director Patrick Magill said.
Despite its high-tech approach, BodyLoop doesn’t require special training or expert personnel to operate, Magill said.
“Thanks to its ease of use, almost all sports teams, sports associations and biomechanics laboratories can benefit from this cutting-edge athlete assessment and obtain the valuable biomechanical data,” he said.

The technology is no stranger to international markets. Nearly 30 units are already in use across Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
BodyLoop joins other offerings at the Milton facility. Owned by a group of current and former NFL and MLB players, the complex serves athletes of all ages. It features a professional-size indoor basketball court, more than 50 yards of turf, five batting cages with HitTrax technology, pitching mounds, a full weight room, a recovery lounge offering red light therapy, saunas and cryo-plunges and a nutrition cafe.
The site is one of five Legacy Sports Complex training centers operating across suburban Atlanta.
“This is more than a new facility—it’s a transformation in how we approach athlete development,” Legacy Sports Complex co-founder and former MMA and Muay Thai fighter Dustin Chovanic said. “We’re bringing a level of precision and insight to training that athletes in the U.S. simply haven’t had access to until now.”
Chovanic co-founded the concept alongside former Atlanta Braves pitcher Johnny Venters in 2022.

