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March 10th, 2010 
Armand Gilks
Sales Representative
416 322 8000


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Current Market Stats 

Total GTA
Sales % chge July '09 vs July ‘08     +28
Avge Selling Price July 2009            $395,414
Price %chge July '09 vs July ‘08       +6%

C02     Annex/Seatton Village/Little Italy/Bloor W, etc
Sales % chge July '09 vs July ‘08     -5%
Avge Selling Price July 2009            $596,979
Price %chge July '09 vs July ‘08       -12% 

Little Italy, sometimes referred to as College Street West or Latintown, is a district in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is well known for its numerous Italian Canadian restaurants and businesses. The district is centred around a restaurant/bar/shopping strip along College Street, the heart of which being the intersection of College and Clinton Streets and the adjacent residential area, but spreading out between Bathurst Street and Dufferin Street. It overlaps into two official City of Toronto neighbourhoods: Palmerston-Little Italy north of College Street and Trinity-Bellwoods to the south.

History

Italians arrived in Toronto in large numbers during the early 20th century. Italians first settled in an area then known as "The Ward" - centred around University Avenue and College Street. By the 1920s, most Italians had moved west of Bathurst Street and the College-Clinton area had emerged as the city's major Little Italy. The affordable Victorian homes that line the side streets of this neighbourhood were bought by Italian immigrants, many of whom found work on the railways and in road construction. These houses were bought by mostly italians creating business around College St.

Many Italians moved out of the area during the 1950s and 1960s, and headed northwest to the Corso Italia neighbourhood around St. Clair Avenue and Dufferin Street, or to adjacent suburbs. By the 1960s, St. Clair Avenue had supplanted College Street as the centre of Italian culture in Toronto. Within the past three decades, many Italian Torontonians moved to Toronto's suburbs. There are now further concentrations of Italian Canadians in Downsview in Toronto; Woodbridge and Maple in Vaughan; Richmond Hill, and Mississauga.

Today, Little Italy's population is ethnically diverse. By the 1960s, the Hispanic Canadians had become the largest ethnic group. Little Italy has also become quite popular with younger crowds because of its vibrant nightlife and its proximity to the downtown core. Since the 1980s, many young professionals have been buying homes in the neighbourhood.

Schools

To find out which schools are associated with your prospective new home, please click here to access the TDSB Street Guide and enter the street name only.

See also

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