Centre sportif de la Ganterie, sometimes called Complexe sportif de la Ganterie, is a public sports complex located on the eponymous rue de la Ganterie in Poitiers, Vienne, France. It consists of an aquatic center and an indoor arena. A private ice rink, which was later acquired by the city and integrated into the swimming pool's heating system, is located close by and considered a semi-official part of the ensemble. [1] [2]
Most of the complex's venues host sections of multisports association Stade Poitevin, and it is located close to Stade Poitevin's headquarters at Stade Paul-Rébeilleau.
Piscine de la Ganterie | |
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46°34′12″N0°22′07″E / 46.56996°N 0.36861°E | |
Opened | 1966 |
Type | Indoor, outdoor [3] |
Length | 50 metre (main outdoor pool) 25 metre (indoor pool 1) 15 metre (indoor pool 2) |
Width | 15 metre (main outdoor pool) 15 metre (indoor pool 1) 15 metre (indoor pool 2) |
Depth | 5.5 metre (outdoor diving pool) [3] |
Opened in 1966, the indoor area features a 25-metre and a 15-metre pool. [3] The outdoor area, which opened in 1968, [4] features a 50-metre pool and a diving pool. [3] In 1980, the main outdoor pool was covered with a bubble for the winter months. In 2019, the bubble was removed and it became a year-round outdoor heated pool, which was partly made possible by heat recycled from the ice rink. [4] It also houses a dojo and a gym. [5]
Capacity | 2604 [5] |
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Opened | 1970 [1] |
Tenants | |
Stade poitevin volley beach (1973–present) |
Opened in 1970, this indoor hall is best known as the home venue for the Stade poitevin volley beach, and was briefly the home court for Poitiers basket 86. Originally known as Salle omnisports de la Ganterie, it was renamed in honor of French-Togolese volleyball player Frédéric Lawson-Body, following his untimely death from meningitis in 1989. [1]
The hall represents a rare departure from architects Jean-Claude Dondel and Roger Dhuit's usual functionalist style, and its arched roof has earned it comparisons to the Eero Saarinen-designed Ingalls Rink at Yale University. A restaurant connecting the hall to the swimming pool was considered during the design phase, but it was abandoned and the buildings have remained separate. [1]
Capacity | 299 (seated) [6] 810 (total) [7] |
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Field size | 56 × 26 metre [6] |
Opened | 1969 [6] |
Tenants | |
Stade poitevin hockey sur glace (1969–present) |
Opened in 1969 across the street from Centre sportif de la Ganterie, [6] the ice rink was part of the same redevelopment wave but was originally a separate, private venture. [8] It has since then become a public facility. In 2013–2014, it underwent renovations for aesthetic and environmental purposes, during which it was connected to the swimming pool by a waste heat recovery system. [9]
In 2017, it was at the center of a feud for ice time between World Champion figure skater Brian Joubert's new club and his former Stade poitevin club de glace. [10]
It is home to the Stade Poitevin ice hockey team. It hosted the French Junior Figure Skating Championships in 2016. [11]
Poitiers is a city on the River Clain in west-central France. It is a commune and the capital of the Vienne department and the historical centre of Poitou. In 2017 it had a population of 88,291. Its agglomeration has 130,853 inhabitants in 2016 and is the center of an urban area of 261,795 inhabitants. It is a city of art and history, still known as "Ville aux cent clochers".
Brian Joubert is a French figure skating coach and former competitor. He is the 2007 World champion, a three-time European champion, and the 2006–07 Grand Prix Final champion. On the domestic level, he is an eight-time French National champion.
Stade Poitevin FC is a French football team based in the city of Poitiers, which was established in 1921. It was known as Poitiers FC between 2007 and 2018, and had a number of other names in its history. The club spent the 1995–96 season in Ligue 2.
The Stade Michel-Amand, formerly the Stade de la Pépinière, is a stadium in Poitiers, France. It is currently used for football matches and is the home stadium of Stade Poitevin FC. It has a capacity of 12,000.
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It is part of the Cité des Courtilles, a social housing residential area located in the northern part of Asnières, which also includes a shopping district, Centre commercial des Courtilles, and used to include an eponymous school.
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It is best known as the longtime home of Chamonix's men's professional ice hockey team, which currently goes by the name Pionniers de Chamonix Mont-Blanc. It is also home to the Rebelles de Chamonix senior women's team.
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Jean-Claude Dondel and Roger Dhuit were a team of French architects.
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Centre de loisirs du Petit Port, also marketed by the metonym Le Petit Port, is a sports complex in Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, France. It is part of the eponymous Petit Port sports and recreation district. Opened in 1984, the building underwent two major restructurings in 2007–08 and 2017.
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The complex was originally known as Centre sportif du Docteur Duchêne, after Doctor Auguste Duchêne, a former deputy mayor and president of FC Rouen. In 2006, it was renamed after Guy Boissière, a coach for the French national swimming team between 1960 and 1991, and France's 1986 All-Sports Coach of the Year. It is also referred to as Piscine-patinoire de l'île Lacroix, after the Seine island it was built on.
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