The private lake is what defines life in SundanceLake Sundance belongs to residents, and in a city where most waterfront is public, that distinction shapes the neighbourhood's rhythms in quiet but real ways. Summers pull families to the water; winters bring skaters. The surrounding streets are mature and owner-occupied, lined with trees that took decades to grow. Sundance School and Fish Creek School keep kids close to home, and the transit routes running toward Somerset-Bridlewood Station make downtown reachable without a car. The Sundance Centre draws a different crowd entirely — people from across the south end make the trip specifically for government services, which means the parking lot has a life of its own on weekday mornings. Locals learn to time their errands around it. Shoppers Drug Mart handles the day-to-day, and the dining strip nearby gives the commercial stretch a more lived-in feel than a purely residential suburb this far south might otherwise have.

5,571
Population
91.5%
Owner-Occupied
43.7
Median Age
$73,867
Avg Income
14.6%
Visible Minority

Census 2021

The Vibe

711trees per 1,000
498city avg
30parks
9designated
3in community
Father James Whelihan (CSSD)
Renfrew Thomas W. Buchanan Centre (Other)
CattleBaron Steakhouse SE - Sundance
5restaurants
1cafes
2bakeries
Jerome Ng
3pharmacy
1banks
1shopping
Lotfi Mellah
5childcare
1gyms
5dentists
1vets

The Economy

$767,632avg assessed
$717,869city avg
detached
3k
semi detached
70
row
70
10.4xprice-to-income
11.2xcity avg
Here
10.4
City
11.2
35permits (12mo)
60active licenses
Personal Service
24
Retail
16
Food Service
14
Other
2

The Infrastructure

9crimes per 1,000
18.7city avg
7.2stops per 1,000
4.5city avg
15.7 kmto downtown
Route 11 — Southwest Loop
Route 12 — Southwest Loop
Route 14 — Bridlewood/Cranston
304per 1,000
296city avg