Stadium Name: | Centre sportif des Courtilles |
Fullname: | Centre sportif d'Asnières-sur-Seine |
Address: | 1 boulevard Pierre de Coubertin |
Location: | Asnières-sur-Seine, France |
Publictransit: | Asnières-Genevilliers–Les Courtilles |
Built: | 1962[1] –1975 |
Yearsactive: | 1964–present |
Surface: | 27,650 m2[2] |
Centre sportif d'Asnières-sur-Seine, commonly known as Centre sportif des Courtilles, is a multisports facility located in the Paris suburb of Asnières-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, France.
It is part of the Cité des Courtilles, a social housing residential area located in the northern part of Asnières,[3] which also includes a shopping district, Centre commercial des Courtilles,[4] and used to include an eponymous school.[3]
The project's first phase, in the early 1960s, consisted of a gymnasium and a swimming pool. It was stretched to the south in the early 1970s with the construction of an ice rink. A tennis park was built in its center in the mid-1970s.[3]
A boxing gym, a fencing hall, an archery range and a soccer training pitch were later fit out in the complex's facilities.[5]
Piscine et gymnase des Courtilles | |
Main Venue: | Gymnase des Courtilles |
Main Venue Capacity: | 625 800 |
Other Facilities: | Piscine Franck Esposito |
Opened: | 27 November 1964 [6] |
Architect: | Jean-Claude Dondel and Roger Dhuit |
Main Contractors: | Groupement Rheims et Debout |
Tenants: | Asnières Volley 92 |
The northern part of the Sports Center consists of two adjoining buildings, which together formed the first phase of the development.[3]
The gymnasium is the home court for five-time French volleyball Champions Asnières Volley 92, which also acted as the volleyball section of Paris Saint-Germain between the 1992–93 and 1994–95 seasons. During those years, the team split its games between Gymnase des Courtilles and Halle Georges Carpentier in Paris.[7]
The aquatic center opened to the public in the summer of 1964. A formal inauguration ceremony was held in November of that year, attended by Olympic medallist Christine Caron and ministers Maurice Herzog and Christian Fouchet.[8] Initially just called Piscine des Courtilles, it underwent an extensive renovation in 2003, expanding it from two to four pools ranging from a paddling area to a 25-metre pool. On that occasion, it took the name of FINA World Championship and Olympic medallist Franck Esposito.[9]
Stadium Name: | Patinoire olympique d'Asnières-sur-Seine |
Opened: | 19 October 1970 |
Tenants: | Castors d'Asnières (1972–present) |
Dimensions: | 60 × 30 metre |
Seating Capacity: | 1421 2239 [10] |
Patinoire olympique d'Asnières-sur-Seine, commonly known as Patinoire des Courtilles, is a multisports venue located in the southern part of the Centre sportif des Courtilles. It is named after and primarily known for its main hall which houses the city's permanent ice rink, although other activities are hosted by the venue's secondary facilities.
Plans for the new building were approved in 1966[3] and it opened in 1970.[1] It features a 60 × 30 metre Olympic-sized track, with seating for 1,421 spectators. It is the home ice for semi-professional ice hockey team Castors d'Asnières.
It hosted the French Figure Skating Championships on three occasions (1976, 1982 and 2003), in addition to hosting the French Ice Dancing Championships in 1973, when the event was still held as a standalone fixture. It also hosted the French Short Track Speed Skating Championships in 1999.[11]
The ice rink building also houses a boxing gym, managed by the local Asnières Boxing Club, a member of the French Boxing Federation.In June 2014, former cruiserweight World Champion Jean-Marc Mormeck fought the first fight of his short-lived comeback in the main hall of the Patinoire olympique.[12]
Following the ice rink's entry into service, the outdoor area between it and the swimming pool/gymnasium to the north was set aside for tennis. The new Tennis des Courtilles was inaugurated on 27 September 1975.[6]
Originally designed for eight courts featuring both carpet (Matéflex) and clay, the facility was converted to a low-maintenance asphalt surface in the mid-1980s,[3] and scaled back to two courts with the remaining area used for a recreational synthetic soccer pitch.[5]