Bramalea City Centre dining
Food court · GlobalThe huge food court and restaurants in and around Bramalea City Centre — global fast-casual, halal, dessert spots and sit-down chains serving the mall and transit crowds.
East Brampton — Bramalea and the planned new-town neighbourhoods east of Dixie.
Restaurants, shops, schools and parks across 4 communities — researched, written and updated by your local broker.
The huge food court and restaurants in and around Bramalea City Centre — global fast-casual, halal, dessert spots and sit-down chains serving the mall and transit crowds.
The casual restaurants and takeout serving Madoc around Centre and Vodden — South Asian, halal, Caribbean and pizza spots in the plazas north of downtown.
The restaurants and takeout around Torbram and Queen serving Westgate — South Asian, halal, Afghan and Caribbean kitchens and sweet shops reflecting the area's diversity.
The Caribbean, West African and global takeout in the Westgate plazas along Torbram — roti, jerk, jollof and curries reflecting one of Brampton's most diverse strips.
The busy Queen Street East food strip — South Asian, halal, Afghan and Caribbean restaurants, sweet shops and takeout, one of Brampton's deepest and most popular dining corridors.
Brampton's biggest mall at Queen and Dixie — 1.5 million square feet with anchor stores, a Cineplex, a huge food court and a transit terminal, the heart of Bramalea since the 1970s.
The plazas and supermarkets around Bramalea and Queen — grocers, pharmacies, banks, halal butchers and the everyday shops serving the surrounding section neighbourhoods.
The plazas and storefronts around Vodden and Kennedy serving Madoc — grocers, pharmacies, bakeries and the everyday shops and services of an established community.
The plazas and supermarkets along Torbram serving Westgate — grocers, pharmacies, money services, bakeries and the everyday shops of a diverse east-Brampton community.
The plazas and supermarkets strung along Queen east of Dixie — grocers, gold and sari shops, money services, pharmacies and the everyday shops of a bustling corridor.
The schools serving Bramalea, including Chinguacousy SS, Bramalea SS and the local Catholic and public elementary schools — community schools across the alphabet sections.
The schools serving Madoc, including the local public and Catholic elementary schools — community schools among the mature streets north of downtown.
The schools serving Westgate, including the local public and Catholic elementary schools — community schools for the family streets north of Queen.
The public schools serving the Queen Street corridor — community elementary schools for the apartment and townhouse streets along and north of Queen east of Dixie.
The Catholic and secondary schools serving the Queen corridor, including the local Catholic elementary schools and nearby high schools for the diverse east-Brampton community.
Brampton's flagship 100-acre park — a year-round ski and tubing hill, a tropical greenhouse, a petting farm, curling, a mini-train, ponds and gardens, all off Bramalea Road.
The Earnscliffe community and recreation centre and the surrounding Madoc parks — a pool, gym and programs plus playgrounds, ball diamonds and green space.
A neighbourhood park serving Madoc off Vodden — sports fields, a playground, a splash pad and open green linking the established streets north of the core.
The neighbourhood parks and green corridors through Westgate — playgrounds, cricket and soccer fields and creek-side trails serving the surrounding streets.
The neighbourhood parks and green space along the Queen corridor — playgrounds, cricket pitches, soccer fields and creek trails serving the dense, diverse communities east of Dixie.
A starter index, compiled from public sources — a few street numbers should be confirmed before publishing.
Live resale and rental listings for East Brampton will appear here once the MLS feed is wired up. In the meantime, tell me what you’re after and I’ll send a hand-picked shortlist by Friday.
Get in touch