is a town in Rauma Municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. àndalsnes is also the administrative center of Rauma Municipality. It is located along the Isfjorden, at the mouth of the river Rauma, at the north end of the Romsdalen valley. The village of Isfjorden lies about to the east, Veblungsnes lies just to the west across the Rauma river, and the village of Innfjorden lies about to the southwest via the European Route E136 highway.
The town has a population (2024) of 2,483 and a population density of .
ÃÂ ndalsnes has an association football club, ÃÂ ndalsnes IF. The local church is Grytten Church, but its actually located across the river in Veblungsnes. The harbour is called "Tindekaia", and is visited every year by many cruise ships.
ÃÂ ndalsnes is located at the mouth of the river Rauma, at the shores of the Romsdalsfjord, one of the first Norwegian rivers to host English fly fishermen in the nineteenth century. The river's salmon population is currently undergoing restoration after seeing strong declines in the 1980s following an infestation of Gyrodactylus salaris, a freshwater fish parasite that mainly affects salmon. As with many other infested rivers, the Rauma is experiencing an increase in the population of sea trout.
The river flows through the Romsdalen valley, which features some of the most spectacular scenery in the entire country. Trollveggen (the Troll Wall) one of the cliff formations in the valley, has a vertical drop of more than . It was an early launch site for European BASE jumpers.
The European route E136 highway and Norwegian County Road 64 pass through ÃÂ ndalsnes. County Road 64 heads to the towns of Molde and Kristiansund to the north and the E136 highway heads to the town of ÃÂ lesund to the west and to DombÃÂ¥s to the southeast.
Trains on the Rauma Line terminate at the port of ÃÂ ndalsnes, with bus connections to the nearby towns of Molde and ÃÂ lesund.
The village of ÃÂ ndalsnes was the administrative centre of the old Grytten Municipality from 1838 until 1964, when Grytten was merged with several other municipalities to form the new Rauma Municipality. ÃÂ ndalsnes then became the administrative centre of the new municipality of Rauma.
During World War II, after the German invasion of Norway in April 1940, British troops landed in ÃÂ ndalsnes as a part of a pincer movement to take the mid-Norwegian city of Trondheim. The northern arm of the attack was based in Namsos. Lacking control of the air, the forces at ÃÂ ndalsnes were withdrawn in early May 1940. Margaret Reid, a British intelligence officer who had already been displaced from Berlin, via Copenhagen, was one of those evacuated.
At the waterfront here, rigs were built to develop off-shore oil and gas wells in the North Sea, with the railroad bringing steel, etc.to the water's edge, and the rigs taken out to sea, past ÃÂ lesund, through the fjord waters.
In 1996, the municipal council of Rauma Municipality declared ÃÂ ndalsnes a town ().
The newspaper Romsdalsbladet was published in ÃÂ ndalsnes from 1947 to 1948.
The town's newspaper, ÃÂ ndalsnes Avis, had a circulation of 4,125 in 2007.
Notable people that were born or lived in ÃÂ ndalsnes include: