The facility is made up of two buildings: the Michel-Normandin arena and the main building itself. At the heart of the facility lie a ten-lane
Olympic-size swimming pool and smaller pool with diving towers, home to the award-winning
CAMO swim club, as well as an indoor track, an omni-sport training room and a number of
gymnasiums. On the grounds lie a number of other installations: a running track, a regulation-sized
soccer pitch, a second pitch with an artificial surface, originally designed for
field hockey, but resurfaced in 2006 and configured for soccer and
Canadian football,
tennis courts,
baseball diamonds, and so forth. The running track and the large soccer pitch sit in the middle of a 6,500-seat stadium. In the summer of 2024, a number of the tennis courts were reconfigured as
pickleball courts. The facility plays host to many national and international sporting competitions. Yearly events include the
Jeux de Montreal and the
Défi sportif (for handicapped athletes). The facility is also the headquarters for a number of clubs, some of which participate at an elite level, while others, such as Sports Montréal and APADOR, provide services to the general public. Montreal's soccer team, the
Montreal Impact, played its home games on the large soccer pitch from 1993 to 2007 and both the professional team and its academy trained there until 2015. Montreal Impact's USL-Pro affiliate
FC Montreal played their games at Complexe sportif Claude-Robillard in 2016. Complexe sportif Claude-Robillard is currently the home venue for the
Montreal Royal of the
Ultimate Frisbee Association (UFA). On May 8, 2024
Ligue1 Québec champions
CS Saint-Laurent hosted
MLS side
Toronto FC in a
Canadian Championship quarter-final match in front of 6482 spectators at Complexe sportif Claude-Robillard. ==Origin of the name==