Niro may refer to:
Noureddine Bahri (born 1987 in Orléans, Loiret), better known as Niro, is a French rapper of Moroccan descent he grew up in Blois who has released three charting albums in three years. In 2013 he was signed to AZ label after many years with the rap label Street Loud formed by members of the French rap collective Mafia K'1 Fry.
He started earlier releasing his street album Niroshima III in 2007. Niro became the first independent act to be signed to Street Lourd. He had his first single with "70 Kg" in 2011 followed by "Dans ton kwaah" and "Pikassos". He was featured in recordings of well-known rappers including Seth Gueko, Kery James and Booba. He is considered one of the prominent representatives of French "street rap" (le rap de rue).
In 2012, he released his debut studio album Paraplégique, that contained many of his earlier hits. But immediately after the release of the album, he was involved in legal problems on some minor charges, arrested after a police chase and sentenced to a 5-month term.
Parcé (Breton: Parzieg, Gallo: Parczaé) is a commune in the Ille-et-Vilaine department of Brittany in northwestern France.
Inhabitants of Parcé are called Parcéens in French.
PARC or Parc may refer to:
Parc is a station on the Blue Line of the Montreal Metro rapid transit system, operated by the Société de transport de Montréal (STM). It is located in the Park Extension district of the Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension borough of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The station was built inside the extreme western part of the Canadian Pacific's former Park Avenue Station, and connects with Agence métropolitaine de transport's Parc Station.
It is a normal side platform station. The entrance to the station was built within the former men's smoking room of the now disused Park Avenue Station, built in 1931. The platform level of the station features a frieze by Huguette Desjardins, and the skylight at the foot of the stairs to the exit contains a sculpture called Métamorphose d'Icare by Claire Sarrasin, an homage to the local Greek community.
Parc comes from Park Avenue (Avenue du Parc), which is a main north/south thoroughfare in Montreal. Park Avenue gets its name from the fact that part of it runs along Mount Royal Park.