Toronto–St. Paul'S
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.
Score Breakdown
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
Want live data and AI analysis for Toronto–St. Paul'S?
Explore Toronto–St. Paul'S live →