North End

North End

Who It’s Perfect For

  • Young professional commuters
  • People who want neighborhood feel with walkability as well
  • Investors seeking strong rental markets
  • Buyers looking to get in on the ground floor for future value

Housing & Price Ranges

  • Semi-detached and detached victorian era homes
  • Smaller wartime homes up to larger brick ones
  • Mixed use commercial options
  • Townhouse and row houses

Pricing tends to still be more affordable than neighborhoods further south

Lifestyle + Amenities

  • Bayfront Park
  • Pier 4 and Pier 8
  • Easy highway access plus walkable to the GO station
  • Waterfront trail access
  • James Street North district, ArtCrawl and Supercrawl

Commute

  • 5 mins to Hwy 403, GO station
  • 15–20 mins to Burlington
  • 45–60 mins to Toronto

Schools

  • Bennetto Elementary School
  • Hess Street Public School
  • Westdale Secondary School
  • Canadian Martyrs Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Lawrence Catholic Elementary School

What Locals Know

Beasley has changed dramatically over the past decade, but many long-time residents still strongly identify with the neighborhood’s working-class roots and community atmosphere.

 

The area has one of the most walkable urban lifestyles in Hamilton, with quick access to James North, downtown restaurants, galleries, cafés, and nightlife.

 

Buyers are often surprised by the mix of housing styles packed into Beasley, ranging from older row houses and duplexes to modern infill projects and loft-style conversions.

 

Some streets feel noticeably quieter and more residential than others despite being only blocks from the downtown core.

 

Parking can be challenging in certain parts of the neighborhood due to older streets, denser housing, and ongoing redevelopment.

 

Many locals see Beasley as one of Hamilton’s most rapidly evolving neighborhoods, though it still maintains a rougher and more urban feel than more polished central areas like Durand or Kirkendall.

North End is undergoing a significant transformation driven by major waterfront redevelopment, infrastructure investment, and growing interest from buyers looking for urban neighborhoods with long-term potential. Improved GO Transit access through West Harbour GO Station, proximity to the waterfront, and housing prices that still remain comparatively accessible have made the North End increasingly attractive to first-time buyers, investors, and people relocating from larger cities. With a mix of historic working-class homes, newer developments, parks, trails, and waterfront amenities, the neighborhood continues to evolve while maintaining a strong sense of community and local character. Access to the gentrified section of James North has become a huge draw.

 

 

Overview

North End

Located along Hamilton Harbour and stretching west toward Bayfront Park, the North End has long been known as one of the city’s historic working-class waterfront neighborhoods. Characterized by older brick homes, narrow residential streets, local parks, and close proximity to the harbour, the area has developed a strong sense of community and local identity over generations. In recent years, increased investment, waterfront redevelopment, and improved transit access through West Harbour GO Station have helped drive renewed interest in the neighborhood from buyers looking for more affordable urban housing with long-term potential.

The North End offers a unique mix of older detached homes, smaller cottages, renovated character properties, apartments, and newer condominium developments emerging closer to the waterfront. Popular with first-time buyers, investors, artists, and professionals looking for a more urban lifestyle, the neighborhood combines walkability and waterfront access with easy connections to downtown Hamilton, James North, GO Transit, and nearby highway routes. Access to Bayfront Park, the waterfront trail system, marinas, and harbour views continues to make the area one of Hamilton’s most distinctive evolving urban communities.

Beasley

Beasley has a noticeably denser and more energetic feel than many other Hamilton neighborhoods, with a streetscape shaped by older storefronts, apartment buildings, brick row houses, and ongoing redevelopment projects. Located just east of the downtown core and bordering the James North district, Beasley has become known for its creative atmosphere, walkability, and constantly evolving mix of residents, businesses, and housing styles. The neighborhood attracts a wide range of buyers and renters looking for an urban lifestyle with easy access to restaurants, galleries, nightlife, transit, and Hamilton’s growing arts scene.

Unlike some of Hamilton’s more polished or established central neighborhoods, Beasley still retains a rougher urban edge that many residents see as part of its identity and appeal. A mix of older homes, newer condominiums, loft-style spaces, and redevelopment projects continue to reshape the area while maintaining its strong downtown energy and community-driven feel.

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