Twinflower Place is a short, quiet cul-de-sac in Milton's Walker neighbourhood, a residential pocket in the city's northwest quadrant.
Twinflower Place is a short, quiet cul-de-sac in Milton's Walker neighbourhood, a residential pocket in the city's northwest quadrant. The street sits within a grid of similar lanes and terraces, framed by Wettlaufer Terrace to the north and Apple Terrace to the south. Walker Road runs a few minutes east, connecting to Main Street and the Milton GO station beyond. The area was developed in the early 2000s, part of a broader expansion that filled this part of Milton with family-oriented townhome enclaves. Twinflower itself holds just a handful of homes, giving it a tucked-away feel despite its proximity to arterial roads.
Twinflower Place is composed entirely of townhouses, a consistent typology that defines the street's character. The units are attached in blocks of three or four, each rising two storeys with a single-car garage and a small front patio. The architecture is restrained and functional: brick and vinyl exteriors in neutral tones, gabled rooflines, and modest frontage. The builder is not publicly attributed with high confidence, but the form and era align with the early-2000s infill that shaped this corner of Walker.
The townhouses on Twinflower range from roughly 1,300 to 1,600 square feet, with three bedrooms and two and a half bathrooms as the standard layout. Some units have a finished basement; others retain an unfinished lower level. The lots are narrow, as is typical for this product type, with a small patch of lawn in front and a fenced yard behind. The street's low volume of sales means pricing is not published at the street level, but townhouses across the Walker area typically trade around $906,500. The homes here show consistent upkeep, with many owners updating kitchens and flooring over the years.
Twinflower Place sits within a five-minute drive of several daily anchors. The Canadian Superstore and FreshCo are both about four minutes away by car, and the Milton Walmart and Sobeys are similarly close. Milton District Hospital is five minutes south on Derry Road. For green space, Rotary Park and Escarpment View Park are each a five-minute drive, offering playgrounds, sports fields, and walking trails.
Schools are within easy reach: Chris Hadfield Public School and Robert Baldwin Public School are both five minutes away, as is Milton District High School. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is also a five-minute drive. Highway 401 at James Snow Parkway is four minutes from the street, making commutes to Mississauga or Toronto straightforward. The Milton GO Station is twelve minutes by car, with trains to Union Station in about an hour.
Twinflower Place trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street is a short cul-de-sac of townhomes in the Walker neighbourhood, a pocket of Milton that draws families seeking a quiet residential setting with quick access to Highway 401 and the Milton GO station. The limited turnover means each listing tends to attract focused attention; days on market average around 67, which suggests that when a unit does come to market, it finds a buyer at a measured but not languid pace. There are no active listings currently, reinforcing the sense of a street where inventory is thin and turnover infrequent.
The typical buyer on Twinflower is likely a young family or a first-time owner drawn to the townhouse format, the proximity to parks and schools, and the relative affordability compared to the detached homes on neighbouring streets like Wettlaufer Terrace and Apple Terrace, which trade at notably higher levels. With only one lease recorded over the period (a three-bedroom unit renting around $2,950 per month), the street leans heavily toward owner-occupancy rather than investment turnover. For a buyer who values a low-traffic, established enclave with minimal churn, Twinflower Place offers a character that is clearest when read against the wider Walker neighbourhood comparable.
Across the Walker neighbourhood, comparable townhomes have sold at broadly similar levels. The typical sold price sits around $906,500, based on a substantial sample of 60 transactions over the past year. Prices have firmed noticeably over the year, rising more than 10% from the prior period, reflecting sustained demand for attached housing in this part of Milton. Buyers are paying near asking, with the sold-to-ask ratio at approximately 0.99, indicating that negotiation room is minimal and well-priced units attract multiple offers. Days on market average around 84, a pace that is slightly slower than the street's own 67-day average, suggesting that Twinflower Place itself moves a touch faster than the broader neighbourhood when a listing appears.
Twinflower Place sits in the Walker neighbourhood, a position that puts the 401 on-ramp at James Snow Parkway roughly four minutes away. For Toronto commuters, the Milton GO station is a 12-minute drive; the full trip to Union runs around 72 minutes by rail. Mississauga is a 22-minute drive, and Pearson is reachable in about half an hour. The street itself is a quiet cul-de-sac, so through-traffic is minimal, and the surrounding road network handles the daily flow without congestion spilling onto the place.
Public elementary catchment draws to Chris Hadfield PS or Robert Baldwin PS, both a five-minute drive from Twinflower; secondary students attend Milton District High School, also five minutes away. Catholic families have Guardian Angels Catholic ES at five minutes and St. Francis Xavier Catholic SS at five minutes for secondary. The proximity of multiple school options within a short drive makes the street practical for families with children at different stages.
Twinflower Place tends to suit buyers seeking a townhouse in a quiet pocket of Walker without the premium of a detached home. The street's four recent sales all involve townhouses, and the single recent lease was a three-bedroom unit at $2,950, unfurnished and on a 12-month term, suggesting a rental segment anchored to long-term tenants rather than transient demand. Buyers here accept a tighter lot and attached living in exchange for a low-traffic cul-de-sac and quick access to the 401. It is a practical fit for first-time buyers or those downsizing who want to stay in the Walker area.
If a detached home on a larger lot is the priority, Wettlaufer Terrace trades around $1.8M and offers a different building form. For buyers seeking a mix of housing types, Apple Terrace shows a broader range, with typical prices around $1.6M. Both streets are in the same Walker neighbourhood, so the commute and school catchments are similar; the tradeoff is in the structure and price point rather than location.
Townhouse inventory on Twinflower Place has seen 4 closed sales recently. Details below.
Sale activity on Twinflower Place in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Twinflower Place 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 Twinflower Place.
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