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Centre des congrès de Québec (Quebec City) Centre des congrès de Saint-Hyacinthe (Saint-Hyacinthe) Centrexpo Cogeco (Drummondville) ExpoCité (Quebec City) Lévis Centre des congrès ; Olympic Stadium ; Palais des congrès de Gatineau ; Palais des congrès de Montréal (Montreal) Place Bonaventure (Montreal) Hotel Mortagne (Montreal)
Expo 2025 (2025年日本国際博覧会, Nisennijūgo-nen Nippon Kokusai Hakurankai, and officially 大阪・関西万博 Ōsaka–Kansai Banpaku for short) is an upcoming World Expo organised and sanctioned by the Bureau International des Expositions (BIE), which will be held in Osaka, Japan.
Additionally, Osaka made its official bid for the 2025 World Expo on April 24, 2017. Yumeshima was a possible location. [4] with the theme “Designing Future Society for Our Lives”. [5] On November 23, 2018, Osaka won the ballot vote. [6] The World Expo will take place for six months in 2025. [7]
In August 2022, the KMC Executive Board joined TEAM EXPO, [33] a group of companies, organizations and individuals who put forth resources to help promote Expo 2025 and SDGs. As a TEAM EXPO partner, KMC created “Entertainment Expo” [34] for the purpose of introducing Japanese audiences to entertainment and culture from each continent. The ...
La Ronde (lit. ' The Round ') is an amusement park in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.It was originally built as the entertainment complex for Expo 67, the 1967 world's fair.Today, it is operated by Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, under an emphyteutic lease with the City of Montreal until 2065.
ExpoCité (formerly Parc de l'Exposition) is a multi-site entertainment complex located in the borough of La Cité-Limoilou, in downtown Quebec City. This is also the name of the corporation authorized by the City of Quebec to administer the site. ExpoCité was best known for Expo Québec an annual 12-day exhibition held in August but folded in ...
The Montreal Casino (French: Casino de Montréal) located in Montreal, Quebec, is the largest casino in Canada. Situated on Notre Dame Island, in Jean-Drapeau Park, it consists of two former Expo 67 pavilion buildings. The casino is open to the public seven days a week, operating morning until late night.
In early 2016 the City of Quebec announced that Expo Québec would not return in 2016 and the site next to Videotron Centre (once the race track site) would be re-developed [4] mirroring the collapse of the Ottawa SuperEX in Ottawa, Ontario in 2011. The former Colisée Pepsi closed in 2011 and is also expected to be demolished.