Summer is the high season for the park, as the majority of attractions are open to the public. These include: • An amusement park,
La Ronde operated by
Six Flags under an
emphyteutic lease • The
Montreal Casino • An environmental museum at the
Montreal Biosphere (
United States pavilion during
Expo 67) • The early Victorian Era fortifications at
Saint Helen Island Fort • A
Formula One race track, the
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, which hosts the
Canadian Grand Prix • The city's largest outdoor concert venue, regularly hosting the
Vans Warped Tour,
Osheaga Festival and
Heavy MTL, and as of 2014, an
EDM festival known as île Soniq. In recent years, the 65,000-capacity venue is also used for the stadium concert tours of many mostly North American-born recording artists, which have included those of
Beyonce,
Garth Brooks,
Kenny Chesney,
Kendrick Lamar,
Katy Perry,
U2 and
The Weeknd. • An Olympic rowing basin • An aquatics centre, which hosted the
2005 World Aquatics Championships • A beach, Plage Jean-Doré During winter for several weekends, the park throws the winter carnival Fête des neiges de Montréal which is a free event that offers a variety of winter activities. The islands also boast numerous hiking and skiing trails, bike paths, large athletic grounds and diverse other services and conveniences. During the more temperate months, a diverse array of free and pay activities are offered on a weekly basis in addition to the aforementioned attractions. There's also a weekly electronic dance festival located under
Alexander Calder's sculpture Man, commissioned for
Expo 67. The islands are also notable for the remnants of
Expo 67, most of which are still in use, though few are still standing. The American and French pavilions are the best preserved, functioning today as the Biosphere and Casino respectively. The Canadian pavilion contains administrative offices, rental halls, and is the site of the studio of
Radio-Classique Montréal. The former Tunisian and Jamaican pavilions are also in use, the former for bike rentals while the latter is used principally for receptions. A considerable portion of Île Notre-Dame was redeveloped into an intricate and elaborate flower garden in the early 1980s, which remains today. The only other significant remnant of the former World's Fair is the Place des Nations at the western end of Île Sainte-Hélène, though this is abandoned and officially off-limits. As such, it's become a popular spot for fishing. A
snowboarding park was added in winter 2009. Image:Parc Jean-Drapeau, Montreal, Quebec 2.jpg|Parc Jean-Drapeau File:Le Phare du Cosmos.JPG|"Le Phare du Cosmos" (1967) by
Yves Trudeau (created for
Expo 67) in
St. Helen's Island in Parc Jean-Drapeau,
Montréal, Quebec Image:Lavilleimaginaire.JPG|Monument ==See also==