
Riverdale Park West
Ravine / Naturalized Park, in the top tier overall (score 46, rank ~90th percentile). Strongest: connectivity; weakest: edge activation.
Photo by Aravinda babu via Google Places · cached 5/9/2026
Riverdale Park West scores 45.8 / 100. Strongest dimensions: connectivity and enclosure / eyes on park. Weakest: edge activation (0). Border-vacuum risk is elevated (42). This score is a transparent reading of Jane Jacobs-style vitality factors — not a definitive judgment.
Area · 11.05 ha
Weighted across six dimensions · confidence 72%
Scores are not bell-curved. Percentiles and expected scores provide context without changing the underlying model.
Street context
Park polygon highlighted on the citywide map. Connectivity, transit, and edge conditions read at a glance.
Top-down view
City of Toronto orthophoto, ~8 cm/px. Reads the park’s footprint, paths, treed area, and edge conditions from above.

City of Toronto Orthophoto · cot_ortho most-current MapServer
Explain this score
Where did the 46 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
- The park is enclosed by buildings (76) but the surrounding streets are quiet (edge activation 0) — frame without animation.
- Strong physical conditions (score 46) but weak observed activity signals (11) — the model says this should work, but events, mentions, and counters say it isn't being used at the level the urban form would predict.
- High connectivity (84) coexists with little programming evidence — easy to reach, but no recurring civic life detected.
Performance in context
- A modest overperformer for its ravine / naturalized park typology (+10 vs the median in large Ravine / Naturalized Park ravine).
Typology classification
Classified as Ravine / Naturalized Park: 81% ravine overlap, 12% canopy. Secondary read: Neighbourhood Park (11.1 ha, framed by 22 mid-rise vs 6 towers).
Edge Activation
Within 100 m of the park edge: 5 active uses (restaurant, transit_stop) and 6 dead/hostile uses (parking_lot, highway, rail). 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 45 mapped paths/walkways and 71 sidewalk segments within 50 m; 36 street intersections within 100 m; 33 transit stops within a 400 m walk; 20 estimated access points across ~2,131 m of perimeter. edge density is healthy — no superblock penalty. Source coverage: centreline, pedestrian_network, transit_osm.
Source: Toronto Centreline V2 + Pedestrian Network + OSM transit stops
Amenity Diversity
4 distinct amenity types in the park (dog_area, picnic, sports_field, washroom). Diversity, not raw count, drives the score so a park with many distinct activity types can outrank a larger park that repeats the same use.
Source: Toronto Parks & Recreation Facilities + OSM amenity tags
Natural Comfort
Natural-comfort components for this park: 12.2% estimated tree canopy; 80.5% inside the ravine system; 4.3% water surface; 77 city-mapped trees inside the polygon (7.0/ha). Reading: ravine-cooled. Source coverage: treed_area, ravine, waterbodies, street_trees. 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
86 buildings within 25 m of the park edge (22 mid-rise, 58 low-rise, 6 tower); avg edge height 11.0 m (~4 floors); 4.0 buildings per 100 m of 2,131 m perimeter — strong frontage density; edges are at a Jacobs-scale walkable mid-rise (3–7 floors); 6 towers ≥ 40 m within 25 m of the edge. "Eyes on the park" come strongest from the 22 mid-rise edge buildings.
Source: Toronto 3D Massing (building footprints + heights)
Border Vacuum Risk
Border-vacuum factors within 50 m of the park: parking_lot, parking_lot, GO Transit - Bala Subdivision. 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 (4 types · 4 records)
- dog area
- picnic
- sports field
- washroom
Nearby active-edge features (27)
- parking lot0 m
- transit stop — River Street1 m
- parking lot2 m
- transit stop — River Street17 m
- restaurant — Park Snacks22 m
- rail — GO Transit - Bala Subdivision32 m
- transit stop — Gerrard Street East37 m
- transit stop — River Street45 m
- parking lot60 m
- parking lot63 m
- highway — Don Valley Parkway81 m
- parking lot101 m
- highway — Don Valley Parkway102 m
- transit stop — Blackburn Street131 m
- transit stop — Blackburn Street133 m
- retail — Busy Bee Spa133 m
- parking lot140 m
- parking lot140 m
- transit stop — Gerrard Street East144 m
- parking lot159 m
- parking lot165 m
- restaurant169 m
- community — Toronto Kiwanis Boys & Girls Clubs169 m
- parking lot170 m
- transit stop — St. Matthews Road182 m
- transit stop — St. Matthews Road182 m
- parking lot186 m
Park profile
Five-axis radar across the structural dimensions.
Citywide percentile ranks
Across all Toronto parks in the dataset.
- Overall vitality90th
- Edge activation27th
- Connectivity100th
- Amenity diversity96th
- Natural comfort73th
- Enclosure77th
Most similar parks
Closest in metric space across the five structural dimensions.
- Tom Riley ParkWaterfront Park40
- Walter Saunders Memorial ParkCivic Square44
- Monarch ParkNeighbourhood Park45
- Mccormick ParkAthletic / Recreation Park46
- Cedarvale ParkRavine / Naturalized Park45
Most opposite parks
Furthest in metric space — useful for recognising what kind of park this isn’t.
- Toronto Islands - Muggs Island ParkRavine / Naturalized Park25
- Rouge ParkRavine / Naturalized Park21
- Simcoe ParkTower-Community Green Space51
- Rouge ParkRavine / Naturalized Park18
- Trca Lands ( 26)Ravine / Naturalized Park27
Visitor signals
Public attention measured by Google Places aggregates. This proxies attention, not occupancy. Aggregate-only — no usernames, no review text, no extra photos beyond the cached hero.
“City park with a wading pool, a playground & a baseball field, plus a petite farm with sheep & pigs.” — Google editorial summary
p91 citywide · p93 within Ravine / Naturalized Park
Source: Google Places API · match high (0.97 composite confidence) · last refreshed 5/9/2026. Privacy contract. Measures public attention, not occupancy.
Human activity signals
Programming, social attention, temporal rhythm, and nearby pedestrian / cycling flow. An experimental aggregate layer that complements the spatial scores — partial coverage, partial confidence.
Activity reading: no inputs available. The strongest signal is public attention / mentions. Source coverage: google-places.
Does this score feel accurate?
Your read of Riverdale Park Westmatters. 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.
- Diversify what people can do in the park — playground, washroom, water, shade, performance, sport, garden — even small additions raise this score.
- 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.