Toronto–St. Paul's

52Chill

Toronto St. Paul's is the neighborhood with a restaurant gap and the data to prove it — 25 restaurants, 1.23 standard deviations below cohort. Eight cafes also below average. Fourteen grocers anchor the score. Social glue at 53. It functions, quietly.

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Score Breakdown

Dining
55
Walkability
60
Daily Essentials
50
Recreation
65
Family
0
Services
83

About this Neighborhood

St. Paul's is the Toronto neighborhood where the commercial density gap is confirmed in two categories simultaneously: 25 restaurants 1.23 standard deviations below cohort, 8 cafes 1.03 standard deviations below cohort. The 14 grocers, which land within the cohort range, are doing the daily-life work that restaurants and cafes aren't. Social glue at 53 — 16 dwell against 14 transactional — reflects a neighborhood where grocery shopping is the primary community interaction. Parks at 8 and fitness at 6 provide the recreation spine. Five-category completeness. The remote-work signal (digitalNomadGravity 80) is above average despite below-average cafe count — which means the cafes that exist are working hard and the broadband infrastructure is present. Willowdale and Japantown (Vancouver) arrived as doppelgangers through the same grocery-over-restaurant dynamic. St. Paul's is a neighborhood that serves its residents without performing for anyone else.

Highlights

Walk Score86
Flood RiskLow

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