L'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis (; ) is a French commune in the northern suburbs of Paris, ÃÂle-de-France. It is located from the centre of Paris.
The commune is entirely contained on an island of the Seine, hence its name.
Along with the communes of Saint-Denis and Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine, L'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis formed the Olympic Village of the 2024 Summer Olympics. This allowed 85% of athletes to be 30 minutes from their competition venues.
Several transit connections are located nearby. The closest station to l'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis is Saint-Denis station, which is an interchange station on Paris RER line D and on the Transilien Paris – Nord suburban rail line. This station is located in the neighboring commune of Saint-Denis, from the town center of l'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis.
Tram T1 stops near ÃÂle-Saint-Denis's town hall. Bus route 237 runs along the length of the island.
The island is the result of the joining of several smaller islands (which helps explain its current length): LâÂÂîle Saint-Denis, lâÂÂîle Saint-Ouen, lâÂÂîle des Vannes and l'île du Châtelier.
Since the 1960s l'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis has housed immigrants, mostly from North African countries. Nadir Dendoune, a local author, said that l'ÃÂle-Saint-Denis had racial and ethnic diversity in the 1980s, as the neighborhood housed various groups of poor people, including Arabs, Black people, ethnic French, and other Europeans, and that at that time half of the students in area schools were White. In 2005, according to Dendoune, few of the students were White.
There are three primary schools in the commune: ÃÂcole Samira Bellil, ÃÂcole Paul Langevin, and ÃÂcole Jean Lurçat.
Collège Alfred Sisley, a junior high school, is on the island.