PORT LA VIE
SAINT-GILLES-CROIX-DE-VIE
The port, which is accessible at all times of the tide, has 1,000 moorings on pontoons and 160 berths.
The port, which is accessible at all times of the tide, has 1,000 moorings on pontoons and 160 berths.
Built of schist and granite, it is situated at the end of the ancient estuary of the Jaunay: its role was vital at the time, as it
The Clock was built by Maurice Durand, the town's architect in the 1950s, as part of the reconstruction of the Remblai after the S
The communal wash-house was built in 1731 on the initiative of Abbé Pierre BOUSSEAU, the parish priest.