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Pau-Pyrénées Whitewater Stadium

Pau-Pyrénées Whitewater Stadium
Stade d'eaux-vives Pau-Pyrénées (logo).png
About
Locale Pau, France
Managing agent Communauté d'agglomération de Pau-Pyrénées
Main shape Loop
Water source Gave de Pau
Pumped Competition course only: supplemental pumping up to 10.5 m3/s (370 cu ft/s)
Flow diversion From Gave de Pau
Practice pool Yes
Canoe lift yes
Construction 2006 - 2008
Opening date April 2008
Stats
Length

Competition: 300 metres (984 ft)

Training: 200 metres (656 ft)
Drop

Competition: 5.0 metres (16 ft)

Training: 2.0 metres (7 ft)
Slope

Competition: 1.7% (88 ft/mi)

Training: 1.0% (53 ft/mi)
Flowrate 15 m3/s (530 cu ft/s)
Stade d'eaux-vives Pau-Pyrénées

Competition: 300 metres (984 ft)

Competition: 5.0 metres (16 ft)

Competition: 1.7% (88 ft/mi)

Coordinates: 43°17′10″N 0°21′29″W / 43.286°N 0.358°W / 43.286; -0.358

Pau-Pyrénées Whitewater Stadium (French: Stade d'eaux-vives Pau-Pyrénées) is the home training facility for the French national canoe slalom team. It was first used to train the French team for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. It 2009, it was the first of three venues used in the canoe slalom World Cup. It is also a whitewater park for recreational use by the general public.

The town of Pau has long been a center of activity for French canoe slalom. The natural rapids in the center of town are still equipped with hanging slalom gates. But the sport is increasingly conducted on artificial whitewater, and the presence in Pau of two Olympic medalists, Tony Estanguet and his older brother Patrice, helped to make Pau the site of this new 11.7 million € facility.

It is located beside a small dam upstream from town, where it uses diverted river water supplemented by pumped recirculation when the river's streamflow is low. The artificial channels are lined with boulders embedded in concrete, and the visible instream flow diverters are natural rocks, giving the course a natural appearance, similar to that of the nearby Parc Olímpic del Segre on the Spanish side of the mountains. The moveable plastic bollards common to many such courses are not used here.


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