
Toronto • City of Toronto • Destination Toronto
The Village at Black Creek in Toronto is a living history museum that recreates rural life in 19th-century Ontario, allowing visitors to explore historic buildings, agricultural traditions, and the daily activities of early farming communities.
Visitor Information
📍 Location: The Village at Black Creek, Toronto, Ontario
🎟 Experience: Living History Village / Rural Heritage Museum
👨👩👧👦 Best For: Families, history enthusiasts, and educational visits
🌾 Season: Open seasonally with special events and educational programs throughout the year
Plan Your Visit
🕒 Time Needed: Plan to spend several hours exploring the historic village and exhibits.
👟 What to Expect: Historic homes, barns, gardens, and demonstrations of traditional rural crafts and trades.
🏛 Village Experience: Visitors can walk through a recreated 19th-century Ontario village featuring farm buildings, shops, and heritage homes.
📅 Special Events: Seasonal festivals, heritage demonstrations, and cultural programs highlight the traditions of early Ontario communities.
🚗 Parking: On-site parking available
🌐 Official Website: The Village at Black Creek
The Village at Black Creek: Discover Rural Ontario’s Early Communities
The Village at Black Creek brings the stories of Ontario’s early settlers to life through a carefully preserved collection of historic buildings and landscapes. Visitors can explore farmhouses, barns, workshops, and village shops that illustrate how rural communities developed during the 1800s.
Demonstrations and interpretive programs help visitors understand how farming families worked the land, produced food, and built thriving communities. Through these living-history experiences, the village offers a meaningful look at the agricultural heritage that helped shape Ontario’s early rural society.
Did You Know?
The Village at Black Creek originally opened in 1960 as Black Creek Pioneer Village and remains one of the largest living history museums in Ontario.
Many of the buildings were carefully relocated to the site to preserve examples of early Ontario architecture and rural life.

The Heritage Attraction at a Glance & the Story Behind the Site
The Village at Black Creek is a premier outdoor living history museum in northwest Toronto that brings rural Ontario life from the mid-19th century to life through immersive interpretation and historic structures. Established in 1960 and operated by the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority, the site recreates what rural communities in Southern Ontario looked like during the 1800s, featuring more than 40 heritage buildings furnished and staffed with costumed interpreters and craftspeople.

Located near the intersection of Steeles Avenue and Jane Street at 1000 Murray Ross Parkway in North York, the Village sits along Black Creek, a tributary of the Humber River, on lands that were once part of early settlement and farming landscapes. It offers visitors a vivid, tangible way to explore history through buildings such as a water-powered grist mill, general store, blacksmith’s shop, period homes, a one-room schoolhouse, and more.

In recent years, the Village has expanded its storytelling to reflect a broader and more inclusive narrative of the region’s past. This includes collaborations with Indigenous scholars, artists, and community members through initiatives such as the “Changing the Narrative” project, which seeks to acknowledge Indigenous histories and perspectives alongside settler experiences.






















