Quote:
Originally Posted by LikeHamilton
10 of Canada's Hottest Neighbourhoods to Call Home, Copyright ©2015 TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. Huffington Post Living Canada, December 29, 2015
[...snip...]
Gage Park (Hamilton, Ontario):
It seems to still be a trade secret, but as Toronto's downtown continues to fill with lawyers and financiers, many young cosmopolites have slowly been making the move to Hamilton's Gage Park. Migrating westward along the lakeshore, artists, educators and young professionals are discovering that post-industrial Hamilton's uptown core is fast becoming one of Ontario's top urban settlements.
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For deeper reading, it's interesting to read CRUNCH McMaster University's 2015 follow-up report on Stipley Neighborhood --
Hamilton Neighborhoods Study -- The Sherman Hub (which people say has one of the best community newspapers in Ontario). The Sherman Hub area is very close to Gage Park (walking distance).
PDF:
https://crunch.mcmaster.ca/documents...rtFINALweb.pdf
I wonder if this is related...
Practically every single metric is improving. It's not flawless, of course: Opportunistic theft (e.g. loose items on front lawns) is perpetually high, and Hamilton has always been known to be tough, the poverty especially north of King especially at Barton, etc...
...but all indications are things (
--on average at least--) are getting better than before.
With the boom of cafes opening (in the last 2 years alone, over 4 has opened within 10-15min walking distance), such as 541 Cafe, Vintage Roasters, Cannon Coffee, Timmy Museum (the only Timmys with a fireplace/sofa lounge), and a bunch of places on rapidly-revitalizing Ottawa Street, and the now-funded Hamilton LRT, and even an unexpectedly-successful bikeshare system that extends downtown all the way to Gage Park, the general vibe is things are improving, though some concerns about poverty and the welfare of our poor friends persist, amongst other things. There's elephants in the room (1-way urban expressways of Main and King, as well as Barton), but step 1-2 blocks south of King you see absolutely beautiful neighborhoods. Even North neighborhoods are improving as well, near Gage.
There is still stretches of shuttered storefronts, but you see a number of great businesses punching openings in them nowadays (like Vintage Roasters, Limin' Coconut, The Kitchen Collective, 541 Cafe, four-to-five-star businesses within a stone's throw of a nearby shuttered storefront) and the general perception is that the empty storefronts won't be around beyond the end of this decade. If ugly early 90s James St N is any indication when it was a wide 1-way urban expressway with shuttered storefronts. And let's face it, despite the stadium wrangling mess, and PanAm flash-in-the-pan stuff, a mere 10 minutes WALK away from Gage Park is now a nice new upgraded new stadium of one of Canada's best attended football team (every TiCats game a sellout so far). Take the earlier stadium debate boondoggle as one may, it's there, it's popular, and (on average) an overall large upgrade (to most). A brand new school is planned to be built right nearby as well, with state of art facilities (and it's also happen to be a major planned LRT station area as well).
Now knowing the appearance of wider sidewalks/sidewalk trees/curb bumpouts in the Hamilton LRT plan templates, TheHuffingtonPost is really spot-on as being one of the 10 hottest neighborhoods. Especially if you were daring to move here while there were formerly far more prostitutes and far more less-reputable tattoo parlors (Nowadays they have to fancy up or sell out.
Obviously, Nearby Barton (and a popular stadium parking area, a common bad impression for visiting Torontoians) -- is still a major problem spot but even that is showing potential -- on a decadal basis -- see: 541 Cafe, a place so vastly an outlier of a success compared to its surroundings.
There is a lot of errors in the HuffingtonPost article, as if it is written by an outsider, but there seemed to be enough research, that it was a relatively decent judgement of a hot neighborhood, given Hamilton's rocketing real estate values (while super-expensive by Hamilton standards, very cheap by Toronto standards and Toronto's proximity). If you had to narrow down to a specific Hamilton neighborhood, that was a really good choice, given the boat is now missed on Locke (property prices already high), but the Gage-area bandwagon, in my opinion, hasn't yet fully passed.
It's all in flux obviously, but many areas of Hamilton still had never been as dangerous as pre-revitalization Toronto Regent Park, nor other difficult areas of Toronto that has a far higher crime rate. It is certainly all relative when you look at it by an area-by-area basis, and areas surrounding Gage Park (e.g. southern Sherman Hub) has been a hot ticket with 3-to-4 bedroom fully detacheds still going for the prices of a Toronto downtown 2-bedroom condo cube.