- Home
- What to do
- Que faire
Que faire
37 items found
(2)-600x243.jpg)
Quiévrain
The municipality, bringing together Baisieux, Audregnies, and Quiévrain, charms visitors with its welcoming atmosphere and diverse character.

Le Domaine du Chant d’Eole
Depuis sa création en 2010, le Domaine du Chant d’Eole incarne une rencontre exceptionnelle entre le savoir-faire champenois et la passion d'une famille d’agriculteurs belges.
(1)-600x400.jpg)
Quévy
Composed of the villages of Asquillies, Aulnois, Blaregnies, Bougnies, Genly, Givry, Goegnies-Chaussée, Havay, Quévy-le-Grand, and Quévy-le-Petit, the entity of Quévy is a rural area.

The Marionville Nature Reserve
Imagine 65 hectares of marshes and ponds as far as the eye can see. To give you an idea, that's roughly the equivalent of 65 large football fields!
(1)-600x219.jpg)
Quaregnon
Located in the heart of the Borinage region, it is home to part of the Marionville ornithological nature reserve, classified as a Natagora site by the Walloon Region in 1991.

Grand-Large Marina
The Grand-Large site, covering a total area of 80 hectares, is located in the Greater Mons area, just 2 km from the city center. It lies at the junction of two canals, the Canal du Centre and the Canal de Nimy-Blaton, which form an essential link in the waterway connection between Northern Europe and France.

Lens
Lens is composed of the villages of Bauffe, Cambron-Saint-Vincent, Lens, Montignies-lez-Lens, and Lombise.
(1)-1-600x177.jpg)
Jurbise
Situated between Mons and Ath, Jurbise is a rural area composed of the villages of Erbaut, Erbisoeul, Herchies, Jurbise, Masnuy-Saint-Jean, and Masnuy-Saint-Pierre.
(1)-2-600x401.jpg)
Émile Verhaeren, the poet of Honnelles
When Émile Verhaeren, the famous Belgian poet, first set foot in the lands of Honnelles, he thought he would die of boredom. A century after his death, we never tire of rereading the texts he wrote in the municipality he eventually came to cherish. The Verhaeren Museum in Roisin tells this surprising story.