Seaton Village
Seaton Village has the highest restaurant count in this batch — 92 — and Christie Pits Park, which has hosted Toronto softball rivalries for decades. Snakes & Lattes is here. Twenty-eight coffee spots. It's the kind of neighborhood where you move in for two years and stay for ten.
Score Breakdown
About this Neighborhood
Seaton Village occupies a narrow strip of west-central Toronto between Bathurst and Christie, defined by Victorian houses, a park that earned its name from actual violence, and an eating and drinking scene that punches above what the neighborhood's profile should allow. Ninety-two restaurants is an extraordinary number — the count includes everything from Mary Brown's to the kind of cash-only spots that don't show up in apps. Twenty-eight coffee locations include Emily Rose Cafe and Real Fruit Bubble Tea alongside the predictable chains. Snakes & Lattes is the neighborhood's cultural anchor: a board game cafe that generates genuine community, not just foot traffic. Christie Pits Park is 14 acres of diamond fields, wading pools, and summer culture — it's what separates this neighborhood from adjacent ones with comparable numbers. Sixteen fitness spots and 19 grocery options round out a category spread that the data calls remote-friendly. Social Glue at 67 is lower than the density suggests, which tracks — high transience from nearby schools keeps turnover high.
Highlights
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