Lakes The Bois de Vincennes is home to four artificial lakes. The water for the lakes was originally pumped from the
Marne River, but today comes from a pumping station near the
Pont d'Austerlitz on the
Seine. •
Lac Daumesnil (12 hectares), is located in the western end of the park, and has two islands. Its attractions include the Temple d'Amour and the Swiss Chalet on the Isle de Reuilly, and an artificial grotto. •
Lac des Minimes (6 hectares), in the north-east, has three small islands. Its length is 500 meters and its width is 200 meters. Its attractions include the vestiges of a medieval monastery. •
Lac de Saint-Mandé, in the northwest. •
Lac de Gravelle (1 hectare), in the south-east, is the smallest lake in the park. At a higher elevation than the other lakes, it provides water to the other lakes through an artificial stream. File:Bois de Vincennes 20060816 09.jpg|The two islands in Lac Daumesnil are connected by a suspension bridge, and are accessible by boat. File:Le lac des Minimes au printemps.JPG|The Lac des Minimes was the former site of a medieval monastery. File:Lac st Mandé.JPG|Lac Saint-Mandé File:Bois de Vincennes printemps 2009 - 004.JPG| An artificial stream feeds water from the Lac de Gravelle to the other lakes in the park.
Gardens • The
Parc floral de Paris, or Paris floral park, was established in 1969 on the former military training grounds in the park. It occupies 31 hectares, and is the largest garden built in Paris since the French Empire of Louis Napoleon. It is one of the four parts of the Botanical Garden of Paris, the others being the gardens of the
Château de Bagatelle in the Bois de Boulogne; the
Jardin des Serres d'Auteuil or greenhouses of Auteuil, and the
Arboretum de l'École du Breuil, located in another part of Bois de Vincennes. The Japanese architecture within the garden was inspired by the
1964 Tokyo Olympics. The garden features hundreds of varieties of flowers, including 650 varieties of
iris; twenty-pavilions and an exhibit hall; a sculpture garden with works of
Alexander Calder,
Alberto Giacometti and other international artists; a monumental fountain created by Francois Stahly; and an avenue of pines preserved from the early days of the park. File:Parcfloral5.JPG|Flower beds of the Parc Floral de Paris Parc Floral de Paris alléeJPG.jpg|La pinède, the avenue of pines in the Parc Floral de Paris. File:Paon dans le Parc Floral de Paris.jpg|A
peacock in the Parc Floral de Paris. File:Celtis sinensis 01 by Line1.jpg|Greenhouse of
bonsai trees in the Parc Floral de Paris. The
Arboretum de l'École du Breuil, in the park's southeast corner, is a municipal
arboretum established at this location in 1936. It was created in 1867 by
Baron Haussmann as the city's school of horticulture and arboriculture. Today the arboretum contains about 2000 trees, as well as notable collections of shrubs, four hundred varieties of heritage
apple and
pear trees, and three hundred varieties of
lilac. File:Arboretum Breuil 1.jpg|
Lilacs in the
Arboretum de l'École du Breuil. File:Alnus serrulata arboretum Breuil 2.jpg|An
Alnus serrulata or hazel alder tree in Arboretum. • The
Jardin tropical de Paris, of 4.5 hectares, was originally the Colonial Experimental Garden, opened in 1899 to study tropical plants. In 1907 it was the site of the first French Colonial Exposition, with pavilions and villages, complete with inhabitants, from different parts of the Empire. (See history above). The garden gradually fell into disrepair; the tropical plants were largely replaced by French plants, though bamboo, rubber trees and a few other exotic plants can still be found. The pavilions of the
French Congo,
French Guiana,
French Indochina,
Réunion, and
Tunisia, mostly vandalized and in ruins, can still be seen, as well as vestiges of the old Indochinese garden. In 1916, the first-ever
mosque built in France in more than a millennium was erected in the as part of a hospital complex that served Muslim soldiers. It was disaffected and demolished in 1919. The garden was taken over by the City of Paris in 2003, and it is gradually being redesigned and replanted. File:Pavillon tunisie.JPG|The Tunisian Pavilion, a vestige of the 1907 Colonial Exposition. The original tropical plants have largely been replaced by native French trees and bushes. File:Pavillon jardin tropical.jpg|The esplanade de Dinh is a vestige of the Indochinese garden from the 1907 Colonial Exposition. File:Jardin tropical - Paris - Pavillon de l'Indochine.jpg|The Pavilion of Indochina from the 1907 Colonial Exposition. File:La mosquée du Jardin Colonial -Nogent-sur-Marne.jpg|The
Mosque of the Bois de Vincennes (late 1910s) • The
Paris Zoological Park, also known as Zoo of Vincennes, was opened in 1934, inspired by the popular zoo of the 1931 Colonial Exposition. It was modelled upon the
Tierpark Hagenbeck in Hamburg, and was revolutionary for its time for putting the animals in open plateaus separated from the public by moats rather than in cages. The most prominent feature is a sixty-five meter high artificial mountain, which is the home of a herd of
mouflon, or wild sheep. The zoo has a notable history of successfully breeding wild species, including Indian elephants. The park suffered from the crumbling of its concrete buildings in the 1980s, since they had been built to last only fifty years. It was closed in 2008 for major renovation, and reopened in 2014. File:Parc zoologique de Vincennes 20060816 08.jpg|Flamingoes in the Paris Zoo. File:Bois de Vincennes 20060816 06.jpg|The 65-meter-high artificial mountain in the Paris Zoo has the best view of the park from its summit.
Architecture • The
Cartoucherie de Vincennes is a former ammunition factory which has been turned into a theater center, which hosts many small theater companies. It was converted in 1970 by the
Théâtre du Soleil, led by stage director
Ariane Mnouchkine and actor
Philippe Léotard. • The
Hippodrome of Vincennes was opened on 29 March 1863, and is devoted largely to
harness racing. it was badly damaged during the French-German War of 1870–71, and was rebuilt in 1983. The tribunes today hold 35,000 spectators. Between 1970 and 1992, it was a concert venue for performers including the
Grateful Dead,
Bruce Springsteen,
Elton John and
Michael Jackson. • The
Vélodrome Jacques-Anquetil is a cycling stadium, built in 1896 and used in the
1900 Summer Olympics and
1924 Summer Olympics. It can hold forty thousand spectators. It is popularly called
La Cipale, short for
Piste Municipale. • The
Ferme Georges-Ville, also known as the Farm of Paris, is a small farm located next to the Hippodrome of Vincennes, designed to show schoolchildren a real working farm. It features cows, pigs, sheep and other farm animals, and small fields of corn, wheat and other crops. It is named for the French agronomist George Ville (1824–1897), who, with the support of the Emperor Louis Napoleon, introduced the use of chemical
fertilizer to French farming. • The
Fort neuf de Vincennes (New fort of Vincennes, located in the north of the park near the Chateau de Vincennes, is a military installation serving as a training center and the headquarters of the medical services of the French military and other military detachments. It was one of a ring of fifteen forts built in a circle around Paris by King
Louis Philippe I between 1841 and 1843. It is not open to the public. • The '''Institut national du sport, de l'expertise et de la performance''' (National Institute of sport, expertise, and performance), or
INSEP, is the national training school for physical education and sports, under the National Institute of Sport and Physical Education. Established in 1975, it includes facilities for training in swimming, gymnastics, tennis, shooting, archery, gymnastics, fencing, cycling and other sports, and has trained many French Olympic athletes. File:Vincennes - Chateau 02.jpg|The donjon of the
Château de Vincennes is open to the public. File:Stechapvinc.jpg|Sainte-Chapelle, the chapel of the Chateau de Vincennes, built to contain what was believed to be the original crown of thorns from the Crucifixion. File:Hippodrome de Vincennes - Restaurant.jpg|The Hippodrôme de Vincennes holds thirty-five thousand spectators in the tribunes. File:SSL20154 (2).JPG|The Theater of the Aquarium, one of several stages in the Cartoucherie, a former ammunition factory turned into a theater center. File:La pagode du bois de Vincennes 2012.jpg|The Buddhist Religious Center, originally the Cameroon Pavilion of the 1931
Paris Colonial Exposition. File:Les vaches parisiennes.jpg|The Ferme-Georges-Ville, a small farm next to the Hippodrome, designed to show Paris schoolchildren the work of a real farm. == Human trafficking ==