SOLD ! 75 MITCHELL AVE

Offered @ $930,000

2 Bedroom Bungalow › 25’x 91’ Lot

One of the remaining Garrison Common Cottages in Niagara St neighbourhood built in 1858.

75 Mitchell Ave, Toronto, ON, M6J 1C1

Almost 1,000 sqft single storey with 2 bedrooms, large eat-in kitchen, 9' ceiling height, and private garden


 

Are you a downtowner seeking a home in the form of a house not condo?

If so, then 75 Mitchell Ave is here to answer your prayers!

A unique, character filled, Queen West space that offers close to 1,000 square feet of single storey living with two bedrooms, a large eat-in kitchen, 9' ceiling height, and very private outdoor space!

That's right: An actual house on a great downtown lot that offers all of this plus amazing building potential, in a cottage-like setting, a sheltered backyard under a canopy of trees, on a quiet little tucked away residential block at Queen and Niagara.

Originally one of the Garrison Common Cottages built in 1858 to house officers serving at Fort York, this piece of history is just steps from Trinity Bellwoods Park, the vibrant offerings of Queen Street West, and King Street's restaurants, nightclubs, and workplaces.

All while being a country mouse kind of a house.

Let the small yet mighty 75 Mitchell come to your rescue!


FLOOR PLAN

980 Sq.Ft.


LOCATION

 

HISTORY

 

This single-storey semi-detached cottage is among 16 pairs constructed in 1858 by James Lukin Robinson on three streets southeast of Queen and Niagara streets, listed on the City of Toronto's Heritage Register in 2005. The buildings are known historically as the Robinson Cottages for the man who commissioned them, as well as the Garrison Common Cottages for their location on the former Military Reserve lands east of Garrison Creek (where Mitchell Avenue was known earlier as Garrison Street). It is part of the collection of the last surviving examples of the original group of 16 cottages in the Niagara Street Neighbourhood.

‘Listed’ properties in the register are those that are not designated, but are believed to be of cultural heritage value or interest. Being listed on the Heritage Register is not the same thing as being a designated heritage property. Being listed means further evaluation of the property will take place if there is an intent to have it demolished.