Neighbourhood · #114
Lambton Baby Point
3,604 street trees · 0.45 km² · pop. 7,965
What the numbers say
Lambton Baby Point is one of the most tree-dense neighbourhoods in Toronto — 10th of 158, with 3,604 city-owned street trees across 0.45 km² — 7,969 per km².
Tree canopy covers 48.8% of the neighbourhood (3rd of 158) — down 2.2 points since 2008. (This includes all trees — street, park, and private — from the 2018 land-cover raster.) Heat-risk proxy ranks it 4th-coolest in the city.
Across 166 distinct species (Shannon diversity 4.22, 37th of 158), the most common is quercus rubra at 9.3% of the trees.
Most common species here
| Species | Trees | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Red Oak quercus rubra | 335 | 9.3% |
| Norway Maple acer platanoides | 240 | 6.7% |
| Colorado Blue Spruce picea pungens | 181 | 5.0% |
| White Cedar thuja occidentalis | 137 | 3.8% |
| Manitoba Maple acer negundo | 130 | 3.6% |
The biggest tree on record
A Norway Maple (acer platanoides) at 23 HUMBER TRL — 150 cm DBH, the largest of the 3,604 street trees here. · Street View
Explore
Tree counts and species from the City of Toronto Street Tree dataset (city-owned trees in the road allowance only — not parks or private property). Canopy % and heat proxy derive from the 2018 land-cover raster. Population is from the 2021 census, joined by the 158-neighbourhood model.