Parisian Walkways: Île Saint Louis

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parisian walkways

p e o p l e ❙ p l e a s ure ❙ pl a c e s

Île Saint-Louis An “island at the heart of the city” offering a seductive mix of history, culture, cuisine & tranquility… Words & photography: Jeffrey T Iverson

2. LE SERGENT RECRUTEUR 41 rue Saint-Louis en l’Île Tel: +33 1 43 54 75 42

3. BOUCHERIE GARDIL 44 rue Saint-Louis en l’Île Tel: +33 1 43 54 97 15

4. GALéRIE DDG 56 rue Saint-Louis en l’Île Tel: +33 1 40 46 06 21

5. FROMAGERIE 38 SAINT LOUIS 38 rue Saint-Louis en l’Île Tel: +33 1 40 46 06 21

6. LIBRARIE ULYSSE 26 rue Saint-Louis en l’Île Tel: +33 1 43 25 17 35

Attend a weekly tasting at this charming nook of a wine shop and you’ll realise that owner Hervé Lethielleux doesn’t just sell vin. His selection represents the crème of France’s artisanal and organic wine producers and the shop’s a passionately curated living museum of varietal diversity and oenological traditions.

Since it opened in 2012, this has been unlike any other Paris eaterie. Its breathtaking design by Spanish auteur Jaime Hayón is as contemporary as the cuisine elegantly imagined by Michel Bras acolyte, Antonin Bonnet. Michelin-starred chef Noam Gedalof uses seasonal, ethical ingredients to infuse traditional French cuisine with modernity.

An island fixture for over three decades, JeanPaul Gardil is renowned for vending some of the finest beef in Paris. Over the years, he’s expanded the range offered by this carnivore’s paradise to include the likes of poularde à l’Égyptienne (chicken fattened with figs), ‘salt marsh lamb’ and Jambon Noir de Bigorre.

From Sophie Michalon’s nostalgic northern landscapes to David Garcia’s depictions of Burgundian forests and farms, and Régis Pettinari’s moving Paris cityscapes – which can rekindle love for the capital as a valid artistic subject – Galérie DDG offers a tour de France courtesy of the country’s greatest living painters.

Didier Grosjean and Thibault Lhirondelle opened this small cheese shop with a major ambition, namely to sell only the finest raw milk cheeses, aged to perfection. Add in the selection of wines from small independent producers, excellent foie gras and spice cakes, and ‘38’ becomes your one-stop shop for a really gourmet picnic.

In 1971, after a decade spent journeying around over 150 countries, Catherine Domain founded this, the world’s first travel book shop. With more than 20,000 books and maps covering the entire globe in stock, whether you desire to walk in the footsteps of Alexander the Great or ride donkeys across the Alps, your voyage starts here.

A verse by the surrealist poet Louis Aragon (1897-1982) greets flâneurs who stumble upon a small plaza named after the Parisian auteur, on the western tip of the Île Saint-Louis: “Connaissez-vous l’île Au cœur de la ville Où tout est tranquille Eternellement” The Place Louis Aragon boasts a panoramic view of the Seine and its bridges, one where the Île de la Cité looms large, just across the water. Aragon’s words may well ring true for anyone who’s made their way around the quays and streets of this stunningly beautiful island, which is

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embraced by the river and caressed by the waves of passing boats. Step onto Île Saint-Louis and the pace of life suddenly, palpably slows. There’s no metro station, post office or supermarket – in many ways, it’s as if the 17th century never ended. This tranquillity is the first surprise in store for many visitors who happen here, having fled the relentless traffic of the Rue de Rivoli or the tourist traps of the Latin Quarter. The next revelation comes when they discover that, despite its quietude, the Île SaintLouis is far from moribund and that the island’s people – who are known as Ludovisiens – actually make a life here.

The ‘Chambre de Parade’ of the Hôtel de Lauzun, the former meeting place of the ‘Club des Hashischins’

“The old people who I come cross in the street often say things like, ‘Ooh la la, today I have to go to Paris’,” smiles Nathalie Heckel of the island’s luxurious and intimate Hôtel du Jeu de Paume. “By that, they mean that they are going to cross the bridge.” Nathalie Dumaine of Galérie DDG, who set up on the Île Saint-Louis 18 years ago, says, “It truly is an island, people have this genuine insular mentality here. I fell in love with the unique character of this place, which is at once village-like and incredibly cosmopolitan, drawing tourists, actors, politicians… it’s a crossroads at the heart of the city.”

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Images: © jeffrey t iverson

1. L’ETIQUETTE 10 rue Jean du Bellay Tel: +33 1 44 07 99 27

Yet many Francophiles, and Parisians, almost reflexively dismiss the Île Saint-Louis, it having been maligned by the stifling crowds and obnoxious souvenir shops of Paris’s other famous island, the Île de la Cité. “People assimilate Île Saint-Louis with Île de la Cité and its tourist trap shops and restaurants,” says Heckel, “but it’s not true, in fact.” Today, despite the thousands that cross the bridge every summer, in search of a Berthillon ice cream cone, the Île Saint-Louis has somehow retained its authenticity and integrity, which is manifested in its streets, people, charming shops,

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engaging galleries, passionate artisans, quality-obsessed chefs, resplendent architecture and rich history. It’s an island that’s ripe for discovery. That was hardly the case 400 years ago, when the only Ludovisiens were cows. The Île Saint-Louis was then two natural islets, the Île Notre Dame and the Île aux Vaches, the latter being used as a cow pasture. In contrast, the Île de la Cité had been populated for over 1,500 years by the time that the two islets were connected in 1614. Wealthy bourgeois and aristocrats lined up to get a piece of the ‘new’ island and soon the greatest architects of the day were drawing up plans

The venerable L’Ilot Vache (33 rue des Deux-Ponts) has been a favourite restaurant for Ludovisiens since 1827

for a new type of luxurious home. These were hôtel particuliers oriented not towards an inner courtyard but outwards, with grand windows and balconies overlooking the Seine. A walk through the Hôtel de Lauzun (17 quai d’Anjou), during the annual Journées du Patrimoine ‘open house’ events or as part of an arranged group visit, provides a chance to view one of the most extraordinary Louis XIV-era interiors in Paris. Charles Gruyn, its first owner, was a merchant who made a great fortune supplying cereals to the royal armies. An inveterate status seeker, he married into the aristocracy,

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