SOLD PROPERTIES 1 Normandy Blvd 1000 Dundas St E TH11 1000 Dundas St E TH2 104 Oak Park Avenue 11 Bloomfield Avenue 11 Charlotte St #706 112 George St #520 113 South Woodrow Blvd 1135 Logan Ave #604 1190 Dundas #427 120 Beckett Avenue 1201 Dundas Street East | No. 501 1201 Dundas St E | No.412 1203-181 Bedford Road 127 Galt Avenue 15 Baseball Pl | 1907 135 Wynford Dr #Ph303 150 East Liberty St #2213 150 Homewood Ave #L103 152 Fenside Drive 155 Dalhousie St #1022 170 Bayview Unit 1112 170 Bayview Unit 2410 170 Bayview Unit 410 170 Bayview Avenue Unit #613 19 Sandstone Lane 1907-20 Bruyeres Mews 196 Maurice Drive 1980 Imperial Way | Unit 315 2 Fieldway Rd #209 2 Fieldway Rd #609 20 Tubman Ave | 2102 21 Diana Avenue Lease 21 Diana Avenue 21 Nelson Street | Unit 1105 215 Fort York Blvd #1408 2208-50 Ordnance St. 230 King St E # 920 24 Noble St #506 24 Hanover Rd | No. 603 245 Carlaw Ave | Unit 202B 25 Cole St #1001 250 Manitoba St #717 Toronto 26 Livingston Rd #133 263 John West Way Aurora 27 Green Bush Road 270 Pasadena Dr, Georgina 28 Summerhill Road 28 Summerhill Road BASEMENT 284 Bloor 608 30 Nelson Street Unit 423 30 Nelson St Unit 1603 30 Nelson St Unit 1703 31 Herman Street 3100 Kirwin Avenue #907 318 King St E #313 321 Carlaw Avenue | Unit 111 321 Carlaw Ave 208 321 Carlaw Ave 106 321 Carlaw Ave 112 321 Carlaw Ave 215 326 Carlaw Ave | No. 115 33 Charles St E #4402 33 Lombard St #2305 36 Park Lawn | No. 3904 38 Highview Place 386 Palmer Ave 39 Sherborne Street Unit 302 455 Front Street E Unit #N320 460 Adelaide St E | Unit 1019 460 Adelaide St E #1215 460 Adelaide Street | PH212 460 Adelaide Street East Unit 2106 51 Lower Simcoe 706 5402 Greer Drive 5414 Black River Rd, Georgina 5426 Robjen Road 6 Ouellette Drive 60 Annie Craig Dr | Unit B205 600 Fleet Street #201 65 Bremner Blvd Unit 4510 65 East Liberty St #1917 7 Lorraine Drive #103 70 Roehampton St | unit 1121 76 Proctor Blvd 760 The Queensway Way #803 77 Lombard St PH 3 8 The Esplanade St #2609 80 Mill St Sp09 84 Dagmar Avenue 85 Ben Sinclair Avenuje 85 Ben Sinclair Ave Basement 90 Eastwood Park Gdns #3 964 Jacarandah Drive
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OSSINGTON

ENVISION NEIGHBOURHOODS

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Amid auto repair shops and fading karaoke lounges; an influx of bars, restaurants and boutiques has transformed the stretch of South Ossington into Toronto's latest and greatest destination for drinking and dining. Cozy up to locals at Sweaty Betty's, Dakota Tavern or the Crooked Star.

 
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The History of Ossington Avenue

Ossington Avenue is named after the ancestral Nottingham home of the Denison family who were early land-owners around the street's southern end. The origin of Ossington Avenue lies in John Graves Simcoe's 1793 plan for a western military road from York, the new capital of Upper Canada. The initial conception of this road ran West down contemporary Queen Street West (then Lot Street), hugging the shore of Lake Ontario onward to Niagara.

Following the War of 1812, this route was deemed too vulnerable to American invasion, and was destroyed. A more northerly route was substituted, and cut by the Queen's Rangers and completed by 1817.

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The 560-meter north–south segment of Dundas Street would become the contemporary "Ossington Strip", and was developed as a mixed commercial and residential street beginning in the 1840s. The Ontario Provincial Lunatic Asylum was opened at the foot of Dundas and Queen Street in 1850. From the 1850s to around 1900, the area was a centre of Toronto's meatpacking industry, with slaughterhouses and stockyards on the blocks and laneways just to the east

Defining Ossington Avenue would be confusing until a late 1910s. By 1884, a street named "Ossington Avenue" had been constructed, running north from Dundas to Bloor Street, and by 1890, as far as St. Clair (though the section north of Davenport was eventually renamed to Winona Drive, and contemporary Ossington Avenue ends at Davenport). As of 1884, "Dundas Street" is a T-shaped entity comprising the Ossington Strip and contemporary Dundas Street West, west of the Garrison Creek bridge at contemporary Crawford Street. By 1894, the eastern spur of Dundas Street has been renamed, with "Arthur Street" consistently applied to contemporary Dundas Street West eastward from the Ossington Strip. Finally, by 1923, contemporary naming is in place, with the Ossington Strip having been renamed "Ossington Avenue" (continuously with the segment running northward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington) and Arthur Street having been renamed "Dundas Street" (continuously with the segment running eastward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington).

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As Toronto expanded West and other retail facilities opened, the Ossington Strip became an area of industrial uses, including automotive repairs and storage facilities. By 2003, this area became known for crime and the known presence of Vietnamese criminal gangs and street drug peddlers. A double murder in a karaoke bar that year sparked neighbourhood action in concert with the police to cut down on crime.

By 2007, the low rents of stores along Ossington became attractive after rents along the Queen Street West increased. This led to an influx of bars, restaurants and stores. By 2009, the number of bars and restaurants created tension with residents of the surrounding neighbourhood, and licensing controls were imposed to stop the opening of more businesses of the same kind. In 2010 the restrictions on new restaurants along Ossington were lifted, leading to the opening of several new establishments.

Ossington Avenue Today

At its south end, Ossington starts at Queen Street and goes north, up a hill to Dundas Street. South of Queen is the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health's (CAMH) Queen Street Health Centre complex. From Shaw Street west to Dovercourt, the south side of Queen street is used for CAMH facilities. In summer 2012 CAMH extended Ossington south of Queen, calling it Lower Ossington Avenue.

From this intersection north to Dundas, Ossington is largely lined with low-rise retail storefronts, typically with apartments on upper floors; other buildings house light industrial uses. Most buildings along this stretch date to the 19th century, and many have been restored in their conversion into restaurants and trendy stores, which have attracted visitors from around the Greater Toronto Area and made the area an attraction for international tourists visiting Toronto.

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Running north/south from Queen Street West to Davenport Road, you can find lots of unique hole-in-the-wall boutiques, pubs and bars that offer live music for every style of music lover, and restaurants offering some seriously authentic eats. There is a sense of originality and spirit as you walk the long street of Ossington. You can sense the history and physically witness the beautiful, rich architecture as you walk by the storied buildings that brim with memories.

Ossington Real Estate

Properties on Ossington Avenue consist of freehold townhomes, detached homes, condos and condo townhomes. Homes are circa 1880’s and 1890’s. The majority of homes in this neighbourhood are Victorian row and semi-detached houses. Many of these houses have been extensively renovated and converted into two and three family dwellings. Every year, more condos pop up along Ossington Avenue which cater to the young, hip crowd that frequents the neighbourhood.

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Looking for the best of Ossington?

Parks

Schools

Please click here for a comprehensive list of schools in Ossington..

Restaurants

  • La Banane: Stylish, brass-accented eatery with a raw bar serving inventive, French-influenced cuisine.

  • Bar Sybanne: Relaxed outlet serving Middle Eastern and Moroccan sharing plates, plus signature cocktails.

  • Foxley: Cozy destination known for its ceviche, plus a small plates menu mixing Asian and Pan-Latin tastes.

Cafés

Gyms/Fitness

Galleries