Median 2007 sale price:
$394,000
Property crime:
very high
Crime against people:
average
Neighbourhood map:
See map
This wide-ranging neighbourhood is impossible to think of as a unit. From the eastern Port Lands to Queen and Bathurst, what the city refers to as the "Waterfront Communities" ranges through the Distillery District, St. Lawrence, The Esplanade, Harbourfront, the King Street theatre district, the Draper Street heritage district, the Air Canada Centre, the Rogers Centre and CN Tower, Queen and John, the club district and Toronto Island. The handful houses that exist are scattered and mostly the remnants of what all this development left behind; there are occasional dramatic holdouts, such as the half-dozen houses on Widmer Street just north of the King West restaurant strip. Unlike houses, however, condos have been going up steadily, with the City Place series being one of Toronto's biggest, and the Soho and 550 Wellington being two of the glammest. All that can be said of the waterfront itself is that it has been a mess ever since Simcoe died in 1806 and his plans for garden walkways fell victim to a cycle of short-sighted management, fiefdom squabbles and rank profiteering that continues to this day. In the middle of which are, as the list above attests, some of Toronto's most vital and distinctive cultural and physical assets.
HOUSING STOCK: No matter what you're looking for-from bargain condos to luxury condos to run-down row houses (in the east and on Portland) to beautifully preserved heritage homes on Draper Street (just east of Bathurst) to rentals-it's here somewhere.
BARGAIN ZONES: With the exception of Draper Street, whatever houses are left in this zone are going to be inexpensive and probably in fairly rough shape, so TLC will be required.
THE VERDICT: If you're a professional athlete, this is the place to live. If you're anyone else, the zones that make up the Waterfront Communities are as active as anywhere in the city, and being in the heart of it has its advantages. Local services are slowly catching up with the influx of new condo owners, but the streetcars are still uncomfortably packed during rush hour.
NEIGHBOURHOOD HOT SPOTS:
C'est What? With a large and eclectic selection of microbrews and knowledgable staff members who've been there upwards of a decade, this underground warren is one of the city's great beer bars. The juicy lamb burgers aren't bad, either. 67 Front St. E., 416-867-9499.
Distillery District Balzac's Café is good, the Boiler House impressive and the Soulpepper performances essential, but it's really the area as a whole that draws people. 55 Mill St., 416-364-1177.
The Rectory Café A drink here is like stopping in at a tiny rural village in the middle of the city. 102 Lakeshore Ave., Ward's Island, 416-203-2152.
St. Lawrence Market Fresh pierogies, veal sandwiches, cheese, top-drawer meat and gregarious butchers are in abundance at the various stalls of this venerable Toronto institution. The bounty gets even bigger during the Saturday morning market, when some 40 local farmers and food vendors set up shop. 92 Front St. E., 416-392-7120. |