Participating Gardens
Browse the full list of gardens featured in the 2025 tour and find local restaurants...all organized by neighborhood.
2025 Tour Map

Garden Listings (click each neighbourhood below)
- 1. 31 Norfolk Avenue
A thriving garden sanctuary where bees dance and birds sing in harmony. - 2. 29 Norfolk Avenue
A relaxing and charming garden with quirky accents. Plants and unique items surprising you everywhere you look. - 3. 34 Delma Drive
Lively gardens and robust flower arrangements welcome you into our yard and beckon you to linger. - 4. 56 Delma Drive
Boulevard begone! and take the grass with you! - 5. 36 Ecker Drive
A learning garden: over 120 native species with ethnobotanical and ecosystem interests. Carolinian and tall grass prarie species. Monarch waystation. - 6. 70 Enfield Avenue
A garden for all seasons from full sun to a woodland garden. - 7. 11 Putney Road
Refreshing shade on a hot summer day, with a few splashes of colour. - 8. 568 Horner Avenue
High Garden is an urban homesteader and home chef’s oasis, with front and back gardens intensely planted with veggies.
- 9. 13 Forty Second Street
A little garden with lots of interest. A mixture of perennials and evergreens. It’s a great example of what you can turn a sloped lawn into. - 10. 21 Forty Second Street
A rambling work in progress that attracts many butterflies and all the dogs passing by. - 11. 29 Forty First Street
Come visit our mesmerizing little oasis. Shade and sun, flowers and birds; lovely moments at every turn. - 12. 22 Villa Road
My garden is my joy. Milkweed, sunflowers and an orchard on the grounds, with traditional Indigenous medicine plants. New addition to the family this year — native species leafcutter bees as part of a Métis Nation of Ontario environmental project. - 13. 20 Hilo Road
A thirty-year-old garden with a century-old rose, and a very unique tree – visit to learn the story! - 14. 34 Thirty Ninth Street
(NOTE: Only open from 10:00 until 1:00 pm.) Be transported back in time to a vintage Ontario garden, that offers peace, tranquility and a water feature. - 15. 38 Thirty Ninth Street
Step into a park-like setting with curvy perennial beds, trying to make the most of the dappled shade. - 16. 67 Thirty Eighth Street
My little sanctuary. - 17. 42 Thirty Fifth Street
Perennial garden to entertain and relax. A curving organically shaped patio, shade trees, fire pit table and a small lawn for our dog. - 18. 42 Park Boulevard
This contemporary landscape complements the “Prairie Modern” architectural style of the home with geometric lines, natural materials and layered planting arrangements. - 19. 171 Lake Promenade
Shady front garden, with hostas, ferns, hydrangeas and a faux dry riverbed running through a stand of birch. - 20. 2 Twenty Eighth Street
Front garden is an insect and bird perennial oasis. The back is “The Garden of Eatin’”, feeding both body & soul. - 21. 56 Lake Promenade
Experiment in progress. - 22. 26 Lake Promenade
Inspired by St. Francis, our garden has native plants & animal statuary, surrounded by mini roses. - 23. 15 Twenty Seventh Street
Funky fun in this garden! Don’t miss our homemade, colossal Head Gardener and Imagination Stations. - 24. 19 Twenty Seventh Street
Fifty shades of green + ever changing stone creations. A mature, wild garden. - 25. 20 Twenty Fifth Street
Lush and compact, it’s a bird and butterfly oasis. - 26. 30 Twenty Fifth Street
An eco-landscape incorporating a rain garden, catio and veganic gardening practices. - 27. 3500 Lake Shore Blvd W.
“The Very Hungry Caterpillar Garden”. Caterpillars and young readers gather to tend the garden & share stories with cookies and a cold drink. - 28. Lake Shore Boulevard West between Long Branch Avenue and Twenty Second Street
View Long Branch BIA’s Pollinator Garden planters. Stroll Lake Shore Boulevard West between Long Branch Avenue and Twenty Second Street. - 29. 6 Ash Crescent
A place where friends and family gather creating memories. - 30. 1 Ash Crescent
From weeds to colourful perennials, anyone can have a sustainable and beautiful boulevard. - 31. 97 Alder Crescent
Low maintenance back garden has a winding path among perennials, mature maple, cedar, and other shrubs. - 32. 21 Twenty Sixth Street
This sunny pollinator-friendly flower garden is truly captivating with colours. An old tree stump and succulent rock garden adds interest, texture, and depth. - 33. 36 Twenty Second Street
300 yr. old Silver maple, ivy, lilacs, trilliums, holly, cedars with inspiration from UNESCO’s Cordoba Patio Festival. - 34. 40 Twenty Second Street
The Dragon’s Den. - 35. 92 Laburnham Avenue
A bijou fairytale hideaway for bookworms and daydreamers.
- 36. 3101 Lake Shore Blvd W.
The Gatehouse Healing Garden & Labyrinth. An environment conducive to reflection, self-care & healing. - 37. 10 Tenth Street
An expansive garden including flowers, berries, fruit trees (including pawpaw) and native species. A place of beauty and function, that also supports wildlife. - 38. 61 Tenth Street
I have enjoyed gardening this corner lot for over 21 years, & it has evolved into a rich & rustic, wild & woolly outdoor living space! - 39. 61 Emerald Crescent
A chaotic intergenerational garden plot designed by a lazy but flower-loving gardener. - 40. 6 Fifth Street
Cheerful, sunny garden with eclectic mix of perennials, shrubs, garden art and lots of annuals for colour. - 41. 10 Fifth Street
Our garden is overgrown and somewhat out of control, but is home to many beloved plants and animals. - 42. 12 Fourth Street
2 for 1! A new fence created possibilities for two neighbours to share enjoyment of their gardens. - 43. 14 Fourth Street
2 for 1! Sharing garden joy with my next door neighbour for an expanded outdoor experience. - 44. 64 Fourth Street
An oasis in the city, providing a natural setting for our family and a nurturing habitat for birds and pollinators. - 45. 191 New Toronto Street
Pollinator Path – a rewilded industrial green space by volunteers from LEGS. View along New Toronto Street. - 46. 191 New Toronto Street
Community Allotment Garden to check out with private plots, herb gardens and an extensive orchard. - 47. 80 Birmingham Street
Bell Telephone building, historical garden courtyard, colourful waterfall garden with a century-old Manitoba maple.
- 48. 18 George Street
An English garden with a pond and Victorian-style greenhouse. Forty English roses (mostly David Austin) and lots of perennials in bloom. - 49. 30 Royal York Road
Mainly native perennial, shade loving, bird friendly space on a corner lot, 360° of gardens open to the public. - 50. 19 Central Street
A huge Copper beech and several gardening conundrums posed by two Black walnut trees in the backyard. - 51. 88 Queens Avenue
A 3 level backyard oasis. A deck, waterfall, saltwater pool surrounded by plants, flowers, shrubs, trees, and statues. - 52. 51 Primrose Avenue
(NOTE: Only open from 10:00 until Noon.) A food forest growing berries, fruit, nuts and mushrooms for human and wildlife.
- 53. 24 Fourth Street
Urban Transformation: turning gray asphalt into green space. - 54. 173 Alderbrae Avenue
A work in progress, with love. - 55. 4 Hilo Road
A whimsical garden with fewer rules and structure than a traditional cottage garden. - 56. 72 Third Street
A peaceful, pollinator-friendly garden we’ve made our own. Full of inherited blooms and cozy corners to unwind with nature, birds, family, and friends. - 57. 15 Elton Crescent
Under a towering Blue Spruce, the front garden showcases Darwinian survivors. In back, native perennials and hostas create a peaceful, pollinator-friendly retreat. - 58. 11 Arcadian Circle
Not in brochure.