Property score
75.5
Good
Overall 75.5 · Smaller but newer than most nearby homes
1,449 sqft (bottom 18%) · Built in 1947 (7 yrs newer than avg)
Located in a high-income area with median household income of ~150k
Transit 76.0 · 1-min walk to transit with 1 nearby route · Within 500m: 3 dining spots, 1 school, 1 park, and 1 fuel station nearby
Living Area
Below average
38% smaller than neighborhood avg.
Year Built
Above average
7 yrs newer than neighborhood avg.
Mother tongue
English · 88%Chinese · 2%
Past 10 years Wellington Crescent sales snapshot (~80% of all data)
208
707.5k
$349/sqft
1940
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Property score
75.5 is composed by the two sections below.
Property Score
Community Score
Neighbourhood Sales
Wellington Crescent
How to read: Share of sales in each ~$50k price band for “wellington crescent” (Detached houses (non-condo), 2024). The tallest band is the mainstream budget range; multi-year view shows how that band shifts over time.
Sales-to-New-Listings
1,196
sold
1,852
new listings
Manitoba Real Estate Association March public data on New Listings and Properties Sold across Manitoba
Sold Above Asking
Majority sold above asking
68 of 104 sold above asking · Manually compiled from MLS Winnipeg sold listings, May 4 – May 10, 2026
With a Sales-to-New-Listings ratio of 64.6% and 65% of homes selling above asking price, demand is clearly outpacing supply. Buyers are competing, which is putting upward pressure on prices.
Area census snapshot
Dissemination area (DA) — Statistics Canada 2021 Census · Area: #46110379
Community deep dive
$150K
Median household income
$188K
Average household income
2%
Low income (LIM-AT)
0.3
Income inequality (Gini)
4.0
P90 / P10 ratio
14%
Single-person households
48%
Families with children
Population, labour & age
Households & income
Housing
Diversity, education & language
Figures are for the census dissemination area containing this listing location; sources and margins may apply per Statistics Canada.
Rankings
Tax-Assessed Value
around averageYear Built
above averageLot Size
around averageRank by land area, larger = better rank
Rank by year, newer = better rank
Rank by living area, larger = better rank
Rank by assessed value, higher = better rank
Bar: fill length ≈ share of peers you outperform. Fill color reflects tier (red / blue / amber / gray). “Avg” is a rough median benchmark for comparable homes in that scope.
To see this property on a map next to nearby houses—and compare year built, living area, assessed value, and lot size in detail—open the neighbourhood analysis page.
Transit & Walkability
Nearby stops, routes & transit score
Nearby Amenities
Dining, education, healthcare, shopping & more
154 Campbell Street — 7 amenities found within 500 m, across 5 categories, including 3 dining (nearest 359 m), 1 education (nearest 397 m), 1 parks (nearest 472 m).
Crime & Safety
Wellington Crescent · WPS public data · 2026
Annual incidents
13
2026
vs. city avg
-56%
relative to avg
Year-over-year
▼ -93%
vs. prior year
Primary type
Property
77%
Sales History
Same street
Same area
City-wide
| Metric | Same street | Same area | City-wide |
|---|---|---|---|
Sold price | Top 35% | Bottom 24% | Top 28% |
154 Campbell Street · Sold transaction data notes
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Data Coverage
Data Precision
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Related homes
Nearby interested homes
Address · Year Built · Living Area
Nearby properties
Address · Distance
Similar assessed value
Address · Tax-Assessed Value
Highlights & common questions: 154 Campbell Street, Winnipeg
154 Campbell Street – Property Summary
Key Characteristics & Who It Suits
This 1947 bungalow sits on a 4,786 sqft lot with 1,449 sqft of living space and a current assessed value of $420,000. Its main appeal is the combination of a solid, older home on a well-established street that offers better-than-average living space for the immediate area, without the premium price tag of the surrounding high-value neighborhood. While the property is smaller in both land and house compared to the much wealthier Wellington Crescent area (where the average home is assessed at over $800k), it actually holds its own city-wide and stands out on Campbell Street itself, ranking in the top third for living area and assessed value compared to similar homes in Winnipeg.
This would suit a buyer who wants character from the 1940s era and a manageable lot, but doesn’t need or want to pay for the oversized homes and land common in the neighborhood. It’s a practical middle ground: you get the street and location credibility without the mansion-level financial commitment. A less obvious angle is the year built vs. the neighborhood—at 1947, it’s slightly newer than most nearby homes (avg. 1940), meaning it may have been built during a later phase of development, possibly with different structural standards or materials worth investigating. It’s also a good fit for someone who values comparative data—this property performs steadily across metrics, neither a standout nor a fixer-upper.
Five Possible FAQs
1. How does this home compare to others on Campbell Street, specifically?
On the street, it’s above average for living area (1,449 vs. 1,299 sqft avg., ranked #113 of 400) and roughly average for assessed value ($420k vs. $436.9k avg., ranked #172). Its lot is about 10% smaller than the street average, but the house itself is larger. Essentially, you get more interior space at a slightly below-average street price.
2. If the neighborhood average value is $805k, why is this home assessed at only $420k?
This is a common point of confusion. The Wellington Crescent neighborhood contains many very large, high-value properties. This home is smaller and on a lot that’s about half the neighborhood average, so it falls well below that average. It’s not that the home is undervalued—it’s simply a different tier of property within an expensive area. The city-wide comparison (top 34%) confirms it’s a fairly typical Winnipeg home.
3. The year built is 1947—should I expect older-home issues?
City-wide, comparable homes average 1966, so this is about 20 years older than typical. But within the neighborhood, it’s actually newer than the average 1940 construction. You’re buying into an older-home context, so expect potential items like original wiring, knob-and-tube, cast iron drains, or asbestos materials typical for that era. Always get a specialized home inspection that covers these.
4. What does “rank #401 out of 548 (Top 73%)” for land area really mean?
It means that 73% of homes in the Wellington Crescent area have larger lots. This property’s 4,786 sqft lot is notably smaller than the neighborhood standard (9,488 sqft avg.). That’s not a flaw—it means lower yard maintenance and likely a lower purchase price—but it’s a key detail if you expected a generous suburban lot. On the bright side, ranked #279 on its own street (top 70%) means lots this size are actually quite normal for Campbell Street.
5. Why does the ranking “tier” (red/blue/amber/gray) matter?
The tier color roughly indicates where the property stands relative to its peers. In plain terms: a top-tier rank (blue) means it outperforms most comparable homes on that metric; a low-tier rank (red or gray) means it doesn’t. This home shows a mixed profile—mid-range ranks on most metrics, with its best performance being living area on its street (top 28%). It’s not a comprehensive picture of condition, but it does highlight where the property is strongest (interior space) and weakest (land size, assessed value in the neighborhood context).
Map & Street View
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