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Palais des sports Jean-Bouin

1984 establishments in FranceIce hockey venues in FranceIndoor arenas in FranceNiceSports venues completed in 1984
Sports venues in Alpes-MaritimesSports venues in Nice
Palais des sports Jean Bouin (Nice)
Palais des sports Jean Bouin (Nice)

Palais des sports Jean-Bouin (English: Jean Bouin Sports Complex) is a multipurpose indoor complex located in downtown Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France. It consists of a swimming pool, an ice rink, a fitness center and a car park, in addition to other ancillary venues. Opened in 1984, it inherited its name from an outdoor track and field stadium, which it replaced on the same site. It is the home venue for professional ice hockey team Aigles de Nice.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Palais des sports Jean-Bouin (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Palais des sports Jean-Bouin
Rue Jean Allegré, Nice Carabacel

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 43.708 ° E 7.2811 °
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Palais des sports Jean Bouin (patinoire / picine / centre de remise en forme)

Rue Jean Allegré
06300 Nice, Carabacel
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
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Palais des sports Jean Bouin (Nice)
Palais des sports Jean Bouin (Nice)
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Nearby Places

Cimiez
Cimiez

Cimiez (French pronunciation: [simje]; Italian: Cimella) is an upper-class neighborhood in Nice, Southern France. The area contains the Musée Matisse and the ruins of Cemenelum, capital of the Ancient Roman province Alpes Maritimae on the Ligurian coast. Cemenelum was an important rival of Nice, continuing to exist as a separate city till the time of the Lombard invasions. The ruins include an arena, amphitheater, thermal baths, and paleochristian basilica. During the Belle Epoque Cimiez became a favourite holiday resort of European royalty: Victoria, Edward VII, George V, and Leopold II stayed in Cimiez.Close to the ruins is the Excelsior Régina Palace, where Queen Victoria spent part of her long visits to the French Riviera.From 1974 to 2010 the Nice Jazz Festival was held among the Roman ruins in July each year. (In 2011 the festival moved to the Place Masséna.)Also here can be found the Cimiez monastery and church, used by the Franciscan friars since the 16th century. The church, with a baroque altar from the seventeenth century and a marble cross from 1477, houses the paintings Pietà (triptych from 1475), Crucifixion (1512) and Deposition (1515) by the Italian artist Ludovico Brea. On display are also more than 300 documents and works of art from the 15th to 18th centuries. Buried in the cemetery near the monastery are the painters Henri Matisse and Raoul Dufy, alongside the winner of the 1937 Nobel Prize for Literature, Roger Martin du Gard. Cimiez contains a large Jewish population (around 20%).