Restivo Line runs through the Ford neighbourhood in northeastern Milton, a part of town shaped by recent development and open space.
Restivo Line runs through the Ford neighbourhood in northeastern Milton, a part of town shaped by recent development and open space. The street sits close to the escarpment, where suburban grids give way to conservation land. Ford District Park anchors the area, a short walk from most homes. The street itself is quiet, with traffic limited to residents and the occasional farm vehicle. It feels removed from the commercial corridors, yet the essentials are a short drive away. Restivo Line is a street that balances rural adjacency with suburban convenience.
Restivo Line is a new street, with homes built in the last decade. The housing stock consists almost entirely of townhouses, arranged in neat blocks. Units typically span three storeys, with attached garages and small private yards. Exteriors are brick and stone, in muted earth tones. Floor plans are open-concept, with main-floor powder rooms and second-floor laundry. The street has a uniform feel, the product of a single development phase.
Townhomes on Restivo trade in the mid-$800s to low-$900s. Lots are compact, with driveways for two cars and a patch of grass. The homes are well-maintained, with few signs of wear. Some units have finished basements, adding living space. The street's consistency appeals to buyers seeking a straightforward, low-maintenance property in a newer neighbourhood.
Ford District Park is across the street, with playgrounds, sports fields, and walking trails. It is the neighbourhood's outdoor living room. For groceries, Sobeys Milton is an eight-minute drive west. Walmart and FreshCo are a minute further. Milton District Hospital is eight minutes by car. The Milton GO Station is ten minutes away, with trains to Toronto in about an hour. Highway 401 is accessible via Regional Road 25, nine minutes from the street.
For conservation, Rattlesnake Point and Kelso are six minutes by car, offering hiking, climbing, and skiing. Schools include Craig Kielburger Secondary School and St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School, both a short drive. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is nine minutes away. Daily errands require a car, but the essentials are close enough that the drive is short. The street's location near the escarpment gives it a semi-rural feel while keeping urban amenities within reach.
Restivo Line is a new street in the Ford neighbourhood with no resale history to date. The street currently has one active listing and represents development-stage inventory rather than an established secondary market. As a new thoroughfare without prior transactions, Restivo Line offers an entry point into the Ford area for buyers seeking to purchase during the initial phase of neighbourhood build-out. The immediate setting includes Ford District Park within walking distance, positioning the street close to local recreation and green space. Broader amenities, including schools and commercial centres, fall within a 6 to 9 minute radius by vehicle. Without comparable sales or lease activity on Restivo Line itself, price expectations are anchored to the developer's terms and to equivalent new product in adjacent neighbourhoods. Buyers considering homes here should evaluate their purchase decision on the quality of the construction, the street's planned ultimate character, and the broader Ford neighbourhood trajectory rather than on secondary-market comps. The early-stage nature of the street means that future resale liquidity and price appreciation will depend on how Ford develops over the coming years and how investor and owner-occupant demand firms across the area.
Data on comparable resale homes across the Ford neighbourhood is not currently available, limiting the ability to benchmark new Restivo Line pricing against recent secondary-market activity in the wider area. Without established trade history on comparable properties nearby, buyers should frame their purchase decision around the underlying development merit of the street and the neighbourhood's long-term appeal rather than backward-looking market signals. The Ford area benefits from proximity to schools, parks, and regional commute routes, which are likely to support gradual value accumulation as the neighbourhood matures.
Restivo Line sits in the Ford neighbourhood, a position that makes the GO line the realistic Toronto commute. The drive to Milton GO Station runs about ten minutes, putting Union Station under an hour and a quarter total. For those working in Mississauga or Oakville, the 401 ramp at Regional Road 25 is the daily handle, reachable in roughly nine minutes. Pearson is a half-hour drive. The street itself is quiet, with the road network handling the load without the through-traffic noise of busier corridors.
Public elementary catchment draws to E.W. Foster Public School, a six-minute drive, and W.I. Dick Middle School, also six minutes away. Sam Sherratt Public School is another option at seven minutes. Secondary students attend Craig Kielburger Secondary School, the dominant catchment for this part of Ford. Catholic families route to St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School, four minutes from Restivo, and St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, seven minutes away. The spread of schools within a short drive suits families at different stages.
Restivo Line tends to suit buyers who want a newer subdivision feel without the premium of Milton's core. The stock is predominantly townhouses, which appeals to first-time buyers and young families looking for a foothold. The tradeoff is distance: daily errands require a drive, with grocery stores and the hospital eight to nine minutes away. For those who value a quiet street and proximity to conservation areas like Rattlesnake Point and Kelso, the extra minutes behind the wheel are acceptable. The rental market here is limited, with mostly long-term tenants.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, buyers who want closer walkability to amenities might look at streets nearer to Milton's commercial core. Those seeking larger lots or older construction may find the 1990s subdivisions in other parts of Ford more fitting. For a faster commute to Toronto, streets closer to the GO station or the 401 on-ramp could save ten minutes each way. The tradeoffs are clear: Restivo Line offers newer townhomes and conservation access, but buyers who prioritize walkability or a shorter drive to the highway should explore those pockets.
Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Restivo Line.
No closed sales on record for Restivo Line in the recent period.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.
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