Notre-Dame-de-la-Salette (French pronunciation: [nɔtʁə dam də la salɛt]) is a Roman Catholic church located rue de Cronstadt in the 15th arrondissement of Paris.
The Catholic congregation founded in 1845 by Jean-Léon Le Prévost, Clement Myionnet and Maurice Maignen, had established an orphanage in this area.
The orphanage was replaced by the "Foyer Le Prévost" which today houses young adults: it is a ten-storey building with an archway that one must pass through to get to the new church.
Being located on the site of abandoned underground quarries, the building had to be anchored by deep masonry to reach solid rock.
During the fourth quarter of 2015, from September to Christmas, the parish of Notre-Dame de la Salette celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the dedication and construction of its church.
The double walnut door carved by Jean-Marie Baumel represents Christ and the Virgin of La Salette accompanied by the two children who witnessed the apparition.
It shelters relics of the Holy Curé d'Ars, Clement Myionnet and Maurice Maignen and the tomb of the first priest of the congregation, Father Henri Planchat, who was shot during the Paris Commune and that of the revered Jean-Léon Le Prévost, the founder of the Congregation of the Religious of St. Vincent de Paul.