Moore Park
Old Toronto money made quiet. Moore Park is where Tudor Revival houses sit behind iron gates, the Rosedale Tennis Club fills on weekday mornings, and 12 parks absorb the city's noise before it reaches the front porches. Thirty-one restaurants, none of them loud.
Score Breakdown
About this Neighborhood
Moore Park doesn't announce itself. Tucked between the ravines of the Don Valley and the old estates of Rosedale, it's the part of Toronto where the wealth is so established it's stopped trying to signal itself. The Badminton and Racquet Club of Toronto has been here since before anyone living can remember. David A. Balfour Park cuts through limestone and shadow. The commercial strip on St. Clair runs to Farm Boy and Loblaws — no artisan cheese temples, no cold-brew bars — just a neighborhood that eats what it eats. Thirty-one restaurants, eight cafes, a coffee density that tells you remote workers have found this place. Social glue is high — 80 out of 100 — built not on nightlife but on dwell time: people who linger, who know their neighbors, who come back to the same bench in the same park. The 15-minute city checklist is complete. It's not exciting. It's functional. It works.
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