63 Crestwood Crescent

Windsor Park, Winnipeg

60.9

Fair

Overall 60.9

Older than most nearby homes

1,087 sqft (top 38%)

Built in 1957 (4 yrs older than avg)

Located in a above-average income area

with median household income of ~76k

Transit 92.0

4-min walk to transit with 5 nearby routes

Within 500m: 3 dining spots, 1 school, 1 healthcare facility, and 2 shops nearby

Living Area

Near average

0% smaller than neighborhood avg.

Year Built

Below average

4 yrs older than neighborhood avg.

Mother tongue

English · 77%French · 11%

Past 10 years Windsor Park sales snapshot (~80% of all data)

Sold Count

1,217

Median price

395k

$/sqft

$375/sqft

Avg build year

1961

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Property score

60.9 is composed by the two sections below.

Property Score

54.0Fair
Living Area1,087 sqft52Fair
Year Built195743Low
Lot Size6,053 sqft81Excellent
Neighbourhood Sales Activity42Low

Community Score

71.2Good
Household Income75Good
Education Level63Fair
Housing Stress63Fair
Core Housing Need88Excellent
Employment Health60Fair

Neighbourhood Sales

Windsor Park

How to read: Share of sales in each ~$50k price band for “windsor park” (Detached houses (non-condo), 2024). The tallest band is the mainstream budget range; multi-year view shows how that band shifts over time.

Market Conditions · WinnipegSeller's Market
Buyer'sBalancedSeller's

Sales-to-New-Listings

64.6%

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

65%

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: #46110589

Community deep dive

$76K

Median household income

$84K

Average household income

7%

Low income (LIM-AT)

0.2

Income inequality (Gini)

2.8

P90 / P10 ratio

37%

Single-person households

16%

Families with children

Population, labour & age

Population (2021)830
Labour force participation rate66%
Median age48.8
Avg household size2.0
Unemployment rate13%
Population density2862 / km²

Households & income

Low income (LIM-AT, % pop.)7%
Single-person households37%
Couple families with children16%
Median household income (2020)$76K

Housing

Renter households55%
Condominium dwellings0%
Median dwelling value (owners)$352K

Diversity, education & language

Immigrants (share of pop.)7%
Visible minority7%
Bachelor's or higher (25–64)33%
Mother tongue (1st)English · 76%
Mother tongue (2nd)French · 10%

Figures are for the census dissemination area containing this listing location; sources and margins may apply per Statistics Canada.

Rankings

Living Area

around average
1,087 sqft
0255075100
Same streetTop 31%Same areaTop 38%CitywideBottom 38%
Same street · Crestwood Crescent
#46 / 149
Top 31% · Avg 1,042 sqft
Same area · Windsor Park
#1,267 / 3,307
Top 38% · Avg 1,091 sqft
Citywide · Winnipeg
#120,444 / 194,458
Bottom 38% · Avg 1,342 sqft

Tax-Assessed Value

around average
354k
0255075100
Same streetTop 36%Same areaBottom 48%CitywideBottom 48%
Same street · Crestwood Crescent
#53 / 149
Top 36% · Avg 347.7k
Same area · Windsor Park
#1,705 / 3,307
Bottom 48% · Avg 354.2k
Citywide · Winnipeg
#101,844 / 194,458
Bottom 48% · Avg 390.1k

Year Built

around average
1957
0255075100
Same streetBottom 8%Same areaBottom 27%CitywideBottom 37%

Lot Size

above average
6,053 sqft
0255075100
Same streetTop 45%Same areaTop 36%CitywideTop 29%

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

63 Crestwood Crescent — 16 amenities found within 500 m, across 9 categories, including 3 dining (nearest 224 m), 1 education (nearest 451 m), 1 healthcare (nearest 463 m).

Search radius
🍽️Dining3
🏫Education1
🏥Healthcare1
🛒Shopping2
🌳Parks2
🏦Finance3
Fuel Stations1
Worship2
🏛️Government1

Crime & Safety

Windsor Park · WPS public data · 2026

Annual incidents

17

2026

vs. city avg

-42%

relative to avg

Year-over-year

-94%

vs. prior year

Primary type

Property

47%

Waste Collection Schedule

Local garbage, recycling, and yard waste pickup schedule for 63 Crestwood Crescent.

🗑️

Garbage

tuesday

♻️

Recycling

tuesday

🍂

Yard Waste

tuesday b

Sales History

Sold 9/2016CA$300k–350k
Sold price

Same street

Bottom 38%

Same area

Bottom 41%

City-wide

Bottom 39%

Related homes

Highlights & common questions: 63 Crestwood Crescent, Winnipeg

63 Crestwood Crescent – Property Summary

Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile

This is a 1,087 sqft bungalow built in 1957, sitting on a 6,053 sqft lot in Winnipeg’s Windsor Park neighbourhood. Its living area is slightly above average for both the street and the neighbourhood, but below the citywide average. The assessed value of $354,000 tracks closely with local norms, though it sits about 9% below the citywide average for comparable homes. The lot size is the property’s strongest feature relative to the broader market: it ranks in the top 29% citywide, meaning it offers more outdoor space than most similar Winnipeg homes. The home itself is older than most on the street (top 92% for age) and in the neighbourhood, which is typical of Windsor Park’s postwar housing stock.

Where the appeal lies: The property offers a solid, functional floor plan on a generous lot in an established, mid-century neighbourhood. The living space is comfortable and not undersized for the area. The larger lot is the standout feature—it provides room for gardens, sheds, or future additions that many newer or smaller lots in the city don’t allow. The age of the home means it likely has good bones (mature construction, established neighbourhood trees, deeper setbacks) but may need updates, which is reflected in the below-average assessed value.

Who it suits: Buyers who value land over a turnkey interior. Empty nesters or families who want room for a workshop, a large vegetable garden, or a play structure without moving to a suburban fringe. Also practical for someone comfortable with a renovation project—the price relative to city averages suggests room to add value through updates, especially given the above-average lot. Less suited for someone seeking a move-in-ready home or a modern open-concept layout without significant work.


Frequently Asked Questions

1. How does the assessed value compare to what I might actually pay?
The assessed value of $354,000 is an estimate used for property tax calculations, not a market price. It sits near the neighbourhood average. In a competitive market, final sale prices can be influenced by recent sales on Crestwood Crescent or similar streets. Check recent comparable sales (not assessments) for a realistic price range.

2. Does the older construction year (1957) mean major systems need replacing?
Not necessarily, but it’s worth verifying. Homes of this era often have original or early replacements for roofs, furnaces, windows, and electrical systems. A pre-purchase inspection is essential. The upside is that older homes in Windsor Park often have solid foundations and quality lumber not found in newer builds—but that doesn’t guarantee everything is in good shape.

3. Why is the lot ranked higher citywide than in the neighbourhood?
The lot is 6,053 sqft. That’s slightly below the street average (6,291 sqft) and roughly in line with the neighbourhood average (6,030 sqft). So it’s not unusually large locally. But citywide, many homes sit on smaller lots (5,000 sqft or less), especially in newer subdivisions. The lot’s relative strength is against Winnipeg as a whole, not against nearby homes.

4. Is Windsor Park a good area for resale value?
Windsor Park is an established, central-area neighbourhood with mature trees, good access to schools and parks, and a mix of postwar bungalows and newer infills. Resale tends to hold up well because land is less substitutable than finishes—homes on larger lots in older neighbourhoods often appreciate steadily, even if the house itself needs work. That said, it’s not a high-growth “hot spot” like some newer suburbs.

5. What’s the most important thing to look at beyond the stats?
The stats show a solid, average home with a better-than-average lot. But the real question is the condition of the foundation, roof, and mechanicals—especially for a 1957 build. Also walk the lot: check for drainage, mature tree roots near the house, and any easements. A large lot can be an asset, but only if it’s usable without major hidden costs.

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