FB Playing Fields

FB Playing Fields
FB Fields

Pavilion

The pavilion in 2012.
Full name FB Playing Fields
Former names FB Fields
Location St. Clement, Jersey
Coordinates 49°10′27″N 2°05′01″W / 49.174083°N 2.083595°W / 49.174083; -2.083595Coordinates: 49°10′27″N 2°05′01″W / 49.174083°N 2.083595°W / 49.174083; -2.083595
Owner States of Jersey
Operator Booking office: Fort Regent
Scoreboard Yes
Opened 1964
Tenants
Website
FB playing fields

FB Playing Fields or Florence Boot Fields is a multi-purpose stadium in the parish of St. Clement, Jersey. The grounds are named after benefactor Florence Boot (1863 - 1952) who was the Jersey-born wife of Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent.[1]

History

In 2010, Jersey cricketers won the ICC European Division one title at FB Fields.[2] The venue hosted several events during the 2015 Island Games.[3]

This is one of a number of facilities maintained by Education, Sport and Culture which provide a home to many of the island’s sports clubs and associations. The 8-lane all weather athletics track has hosted a number of leading athletes and sportsmen both for training and competition purposes and is due to be upgraded to a Category A facility by the time of the 2015 Island Games.

Some of the jump areas will also be relocated to the outside of the track to comply with new IAAF regulations. The pavilion can be found close to the entrance of the site and houses changing facilities, toilets, a first aid room and an officials’ room. Upstairs there is a balcony and a canteen Jersey Aikido Club house the 2 top rooms where they teach traditional Aikido and run an Aiki-Fit class, they have trained at these facilities since 2002 and are the oldest Aikido Club in Jersey.

There is plenty of free parking just inside the entrance with additional parking adjacent to the Geoff Reed Table Tennis Centre.

Facilities

The facilities include;[4]


See also

References

  1. or Property Name:. "Commemorative stone to be unveiled at Beauport". Jersey.com. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  2. "Jersey's cricketers win ICC European Division one title". BBC News. 2010-07-19. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  3. Venue's page on the game's official website
  4. "FB playing fields". Gov.je. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to FB playing fields.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.