Transom Crescent is a quiet residential loop in Milton's Willmott neighbourhood, a pocket defined by its proximity to schools and parkland.
Transom Crescent is a quiet residential loop in Milton's Willmott neighbourhood, a pocket defined by its proximity to schools and parkland. The street sits east of Regional Road 25, within a grid of crescents and terraces that give the area a suburban calm. Willmott Park borders the street directly, providing an immediate green buffer. The crescent's layout encourages pedestrian movement; children walk to St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School at the corner. This is a street shaped by family life, with sidewalks and mature plantings softening the built form. Its position offers easy access to Milton's commercial spine along Main Street, yet the street itself remains insulated from through traffic.
Transom Crescent is lined exclusively with townhouses, a consistent typology that gives the street a uniform rhythm. The homes were built in the early 2000s, part of the broader Willmott development that expanded Milton's housing stock during that period. Units are arranged in blocks of attached two-storey residences, each with a private entrance and a small front yard. The architecture leans toward traditional suburban townhouse design: brick and vinyl exteriors, gabled roofs, and covered porches. Driveways and attached garages provide off-street parking, a practical feature for families.
Floor plans across the street typically offer three or four bedrooms, with primary suites occupying the upper level. Interior square footage falls in the range of 1,400 to 1,800 square feet, enough for growing households. Exterior treatments vary slightly between blocks: some units feature stone accents, others rely on full brick cladding. The street's lots are narrow, consistent with townhouse development, but rear yards offer private outdoor space. Condition across the street is well-maintained; many homes show updated kitchens and finished basements. Townhouses in the Willmott area typically trade around $790,000.
Willmott Park sits at the crescent's edge, a two-minute walk from any home on the street. The park offers a playground, sports fields, and walking paths. St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School is adjacent, making the morning school run a matter of steps. For groceries, Sobeys Milton is a six-minute drive west on Main Street; Walmart and FreshCo are a minute further. Milton District Hospital is also six minutes by car, providing peace of mind for families.
The Milton GO Station is an eight-minute drive, with trains to Toronto Union Station in just over an hour. Highway 401 is accessible at Regional Road 25 within seven minutes, connecting to Mississauga and beyond. For weekend recreation, Kelso Conservation Area is seven minutes north, offering hiking, skiing, and lake access. The street's location balances suburban quiet with practical access to daily needs and regional transit.
Transom Crescent trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street is a quiet residential loop in Willmott, lined with townhomes that suit families drawn to the neighbourhood's park proximity and school access. With just one active listing at any given time, supply is exceptionally tight, and days on market average around 93, suggesting a deliberate pace rather than urgency. The limited data precludes a precise price band, but the typical townhome here reflects the broader Willmott market for attached homes. Buyers considering Transom should be prepared for low inventory and a patient search; the street's appeal lies in its established setting and walkable access to St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School and Willmott Park.
Across the Willmott neighbourhood, comparable townhomes have moved through a stable pattern. The typical sold price sits around $790,000, with a large sample of transactions over the past year providing a reliable read. Year-over-year prices have held essentially level, moving up less than one percent. Sold-to-ask ratios near 0.997 indicate buyers are paying at or very close to asking price, reflecting a balanced market with little negotiation room. Neighbourhood-wide days on market average around 88, slightly faster than the street's own pace, suggesting that well-priced townhomes in Willmott attract steady interest.
Transom Crescent sits in Willmott, a neighbourhood that balances suburban quiet with reasonable access to the region's major arteries. The 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a seven-minute drive, making Mississauga a 22-minute run and Pearson about half an hour. For downtown Toronto, the Milton GO station is eight minutes away; the full trip to Union Station runs just over an hour. The street itself sees little through traffic, so the road network handles the daily commute without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary students on Transom Crescent draw to Sam Sherratt Public School, a five-minute drive; Catholic students have St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School right at the street's edge, walkable from many homes. Secondary catchment falls to Craig Kielburger Secondary School for the public board, two minutes by car, and St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School for the Catholic board, five minutes away. The proximity to both elementary and secondary schools suits families with children at different stages.
Transom Crescent tends to suit families who want a quiet crescent in a well-established Willmott pocket, with schools within walking or short driving distance. The townhouse stock appeals to buyers seeking lower-maintenance living without sacrificing a private entrance and outdoor space. The single lease record on the street was unfurnished and moved quickly, suggesting a rental segment anchored by long-term tenants rather than transient demand. Buyers here accept a slightly longer drive to the GO station in exchange for a calmer street and immediate park access at Willmott Park.
If a detached home with more square footage is the priority, Wettlaufer Terrace trades around $1.8M and offers a different lot dynamic. For those who want a mix of housing types and a slightly higher price point, Apple Terrace sees townhouses and detached homes trading around $1.6M. Both streets sit in the same Willmott area, so the commute and school catchments remain similar. The tradeoff is primarily in property type and price rather than location or lifestyle.
Townhouse inventory on Transom Crescent has seen 2 closed sales recently. Details below.
Sale activity on Transom Crescent in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Transom Crescent across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading sold records⦠| ||||||
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Transom Crescent.
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