
Peter Street Basin Park
Waterfront Park, near the bottom of the city overall (score 25, rank ~13th percentile). Strongest: edge activation; weakest: natural comfort.
Aerial — City of Toronto orthophoto, ~8 cm/px source · cached 5/9/2026
Peter Street Basin Park scores 25.3 / 100. Strongest dimensions: enclosure / eyes on park and connectivity. Weakest: amenity diversity (0). Border-vacuum risk is elevated (54). This score is a transparent reading of Jane Jacobs-style vitality factors — not a definitive judgment.
Area · 0.14 ha
Weighted across six dimensions · confidence 56%
Scores are not bell-curved. Percentiles and expected scores provide context without changing the underlying model.
Explain this score
Where did the 25 come from? Each weighted contribution against a neutral 50 baseline. Green = pushed up; red = pulled down.
Sum of contributions = the headline score. A negative bar means that dimension dragged the park below the city-wide neutral baseline.
Why this park works
What limits this park
Most distinctive characteristic
Jacobs reading
Tradeoffs
- 7 nearby towers cast wind and shadow without contributing canopy — passive surveillance is plentiful but human-scale comfort is not.
Typology classification
Classified as Waterfront Park: 10% water surface inside park. Secondary read: Corridor / Linear Park (shape elongation 3.1× a circle of equal area).
Edge Activation
Within 100 m of the park edge: 8 active uses (retail, restaurant, transit_stop) and 5 dead/hostile uses (highway, parking_lot). Active edges keep "eyes on the park" through the day; parking lots, blank institutional walls, rail and highway frontages drain street life.
Source: OSM POIs (amenity/shop) + Toronto Building Footprints + land use
Connectivity
Connectivity blends paths, intersections, transit, entrances, and edge density. This park has 1 mapped paths/walkways and 6 sidewalk segments within 50 m; 2 street intersections within 100 m; 9 transit stops within a 400 m walk; 0 estimated access points across ~412 m of perimeter. low edge density — significant superblock penalty applied. Source coverage: centreline, pedestrian_network, transit_osm.
Source: Toronto Centreline V2 + Pedestrian Network + OSM transit stops
Amenity Diversity
No amenities recorded — score is 0 until inventory is loaded.
Source: Toronto Parks & Recreation Facilities + OSM amenity tags
Natural Comfort
Natural-comfort components for this park: 0.0% estimated tree canopy; 10.0% water surface. Reading: water-cooled. Source coverage: waterbodies. Impervious surface is approximated (Toronto's authoritative layer ships only as a raster GeoTIFF).
Source: Toronto Treed Area + Ravine + Waterbodies + Street Tree Inventory
Enclosure / Eyes on Park
17 buildings within 25 m of the park edge (6 mid-rise, 4 low-rise, 7 tower); avg edge height 33.7 m (~11 floors); 4.1 buildings per 100 m of 412 m perimeter — strong frontage density; edges lean tall but still framed; 7 towers ≥ 40 m within 25 m of the edge. "Eyes on the park" come strongest from the 6 mid-rise edge buildings.
Source: Toronto 3D Massing (building footprints + heights)
Border Vacuum Risk
Border-vacuum factors within 50 m of the park: Lake Shore Boulevard West, parking_lot, parking_lot. Jacobs warned that highways, rail, parking lots and blank institutional edges act as "vacuums" — they suppress foot traffic and isolate the park from its neighbourhood.
Source: Toronto Street Centreline (highways) + rail layer + OSM landuse + building footprints
Equity Context
Equity Context requires inputs not yet loaded for this park (Toronto Neighbourhood Profiles). Score is held at a neutral 50 with low confidence — read with caution.
Source: Toronto Neighbourhood Profiles
Amenities (0)
No amenities recorded for this park.
Nearby active-edge features (30)
- restaurant — Porticello Restaurant3 m
- retail — Convenience Store & Dry Cleaning3 m
- retail — Sculpture Nails and Spa3 m
- retail18 m
- retail — Dream Cyclery21 m
- parking lot30 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West33 m
- parking lot43 m
- highway — Gardiner Expressway54 m
- highway — Gardiner Expressway74 m
- retail — Hildas Cleaners87 m
- retail — Lakeview Convenience97 m
- transit stop — Spadina Avenue/Queens Quay West98 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West101 m
- retail — Lakeview Tower Beauty Salon Nails & Spa106 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West116 m
- parking lot — Harbourfront Parking Lot P3126 m
- transit stop — Queens Quay Loop at Lower Spadina Ave128 m
- parking lot144 m
- transit stop — Spadina Avenue152 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West158 m
- transit stop — Rees Street169 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West181 m
- retail182 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West184 m
- parking lot186 m
- retail — Woolove Apparel189 m
- highway — Lake Shore Boulevard West191 m
- restaurant — St. Louis Bar & Grill199 m
- restaurant — Subway200 m
Park profile
Five-axis radar across the structural dimensions.
Citywide percentile ranks
Across all Toronto parks in the dataset.
- Overall vitality13th
- Edge activation77th
- Connectivity20th
- Amenity diversity36th
- Natural comfort14th
- Enclosure28th
Most similar parks
Closest in metric space across the five structural dimensions.
- Bolger Pl Cul-De-SacParkette32
- Etobicoke Hydro Green SpaceParkette31
- Rouge River WatercourseRavine / Naturalized Park31
- Jeanette ParkCorridor / Linear Park28
- Warden ParkNeighbourhood Park28
Most opposite parks
Furthest in metric space — useful for recognising what kind of park this isn’t.
- Kew GardensNeighbourhood Park71
- Leslie Grove ParkParkette68
- High ParkRavine / Naturalized Park47
- Sir Winston Churchill ParkRavine / Naturalized Park69
- Trinity Bellwoods ParkNeighbourhood Park63
Human activity signals — not available
No activity signals have landed for this park yet. The model has scored its physical form but it can’t yet say how often it’s programmed, photographed, or walked through. See /data-ethics for what we will and will not collect.
Does this score feel accurate?
Your read of Peter Street Basin Parkmatters. We’re testing whether the model lines up with how people actually use the park. Submissions are stored locally; no account needed.
Tell us how this park feels
We measure structure (canopy, edges, connectivity). You measure feeling. Both matter — and disagreement is itself useful civic data.
What would improve this park?
Generated from the weakest measured dimensions — a starting point, not a prescription.
- Activate the edges: encourage cafés, retail or community uses on the streets that face the park; replace blank or parking-lot edges where possible.
- Add or open more entrances and improve sidewalk continuity around the park. More permeability means more spontaneous use.
- Diversify what people can do in the park — playground, washroom, water, shade, performance, sport, garden — even small additions raise this score.
- Increase canopy and reduce paved area. Shade and water features extend usable hours and seasons.
- Mitigate border vacuums (highways, rail, parking) with active programming on the still-permeable edges and treat the hostile edge as a design challenge.
Data sources
- City of Toronto Open Data — Parks (Green Space)Polygon boundaries, official names, types.
- Parks & Recreation FacilitiesInventory of in-park amenities (washrooms, fields, rinks…).
- Toronto Pedestrian NetworkSidewalk segments around and through parks; estimated park entrances.
- Toronto Centreline V2Street segments + intersection nodes near park edges; trails and walkways.
- Toronto 3D MassingBuilding footprints + heights for edge-building counts, frontage density, and tower-in-the-park risk.
- Toronto Treed AreaTree canopy share inside park polygons via stratified-grid sampling.
- Toronto Waterbodies & RiversWater surface inside parks + nearest-water distance for cooling.
- Ravine & Natural Feature ProtectionRavine overlap as a cooling / natural-comfort signal.
- Toronto Street Tree InventoryTree count + density inside park polygons.
- Neighbourhood Profiles(Pending) Equity context proxy.
- OpenStreetMap (Overpass API)Cafés, restaurants, retail, transit stops, parking, highways, rail.