
Why you should experience New Toronto in Toronto, Ontario.
New Toronto is a historic Etobicoke neighborhood where industrial innovation, waterfront heritage, and community resilience established one of Canada's most influential manufacturing districts.
Positioned between Mimico and Long Branch, this distinguished neighborhood blends historic factory sites, scenic waterfront parks, independent cafΓ©s, established residential streets, local restaurants, public beaches, and inviting green spaces into a destination shaped by more than a century of industrial and civic evolution. Former manufacturing lands coexist with vibrant lakeside communities, while walkable streets, mature trees, and year-round waterfront activity create an atmosphere where heritage, recreation, and neighborhood pride flourish together. Throughout every season, New Toronto remains one of the city's most rewarding destinations for discovering Toronto's industrial past and lakeside character. The result is a neighborhood where manufacturing legacy, waterfront renewal, and enduring community identity continue to define one of Toronto's most distinctive western districts.
What you should know about New Toronto.
New Toronto is best known for being founded in 1890 as a planned industrial town modeled on New York's New Town, attracting major manufacturers including Goodyear, Campbell Soup, and Wabasso Cotton before its annexation by Toronto in 1967.
Incorporated as a Village in 1890, New Toronto was intentionally planned as an industrial community along the shores of Lake Ontario, with rail and waterfront access attracting some of Canada's most important manufacturers. Companies including Goodyear Tire & Rubber, Campbell Soup, and Wabasso Cotton established major operations that transformed the neighborhood into one of Ontario's leading manufacturing centers. The community later became a Town in 1913 before joining the City of Toronto in 1967. Few Toronto neighborhoods preserve such a direct connection to the city's industrial expansion and economic development.
How to fold New Toronto into your trip.
New Toronto is best experienced as an exploration of Etobicoke's remarkable blend of industrial heritage, waterfront landscapes, and historic public spaces.
Begin in New Toronto, where historic streets and lakeside neighborhoods immediately establish the community's distinctive character. Continue to Colonel Samuel Smith Park, whose scenic waterfront trails and diverse natural habitats reveal one of Toronto's finest lakeside parks. From there, explore Humber College Lakeshore Campus, where beautifully preserved historic buildings celebrate the neighborhood's institutional heritage, before concluding at Long Branch Park, whose mature trees and panoramic Lake Ontario views provide a memorable finale to an afternoon shaped by history, nature, and waterfront discovery. Along the route, public beaches, cycling paths, heritage buildings, neighborhood cafΓ©s, pedestrian-friendly promenades, community green spaces, and vibrant waterfront scenery demonstrate how New Toronto continues to celebrate one of Toronto's richest industrial and lakeside legacies.
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