Bathurst Quay
Where the lake meets the city's western waterfront. Eighteen parks, a rooftop basketball court, and only 23 restaurants — a real gap. Coffee runs 18 options despite the sparse restaurant count. Porticello keeps the Italian flag flying. Residents here are trading dining density for waterfront access, and they know it.
Score Breakdown
About this Neighborhood
Bathurst Quay sits at the western end of Toronto's waterfront redevelopment zone, a neighborhood where water views are the amenity and restaurants are the deficit. The data makes the tradeoff explicit: 23 restaurants, a -1.77 z-score gap — the dataset's most significant undercount — but 18 parks including Little Norway Park and Victoria Memorial Square. Coffee paradoxically overperforms at 18 options: Tim Hortons, Starbucks, Parisco Cafe, and Canoe Landing's residential base keeps the coffee economy alive. Grocery runs 16 with Harbour Green Farms serving the waterfront residential towers. Courts: just one, a rooftop basketball court at Canoe Landing — an architectural flex. Fitness comes in at 4 — Orangetheory, Anytime Fitness, Kardia. Social glue at 69 is strong for a neighborhood this oriented toward private residential life. This is where Toronto's condominiums finally hit the water, and the trade-off is clear in the numbers.
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