Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile
This 1,510 sqft home at 58 Orion Crescent, built in 2020, sits on a 3,902 sqft lot. Its most striking feature is the building's age. Within all of Winnipeg, this property ranks in the top 3% for newness, compared to a city-wide average construction year of 1966. This means the buyer gets modern construction standards, likely better energy efficiency, and minimal immediate renovation needs that are common with older city stock.
The trade-off is the lot size. At 3,902 sqft, the land is smaller than average for its street and noticeably below the city average of 6,570 sqft. This property trades generous yard space for a newer, more manageable home. Its assessed value of $468,000 sits above the city average ($390,000) but below the average for its immediate street ($522,000), suggesting the home offers relative value for a new build compared to neighboring properties.
The appeal lies in buying a recent-construction home in a city where the vast majority of housing is decades old. It suits a buyer who prioritizes a move-in ready, low-maintenance interior and a smaller yard they can actually handle, over having a large garden or extensive outdoor space. This would be a strong fit for a professional couple, a small family, or someone downsizing from an older, larger home who doesn't want to sacrifice the feel of a modern house.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. The home is new, but the lot is small. Will a small lot affect resale value here?
It depends on what the next buyer is looking for. In Winnipeg, larger lots often command a premium, but so does a home that requires less upkeep. Because this house is newer than the vast majority of homes in the city, you are selling modernity and convenience, not land. The smaller lot may limit appreciation compared to a large lot in a hot neighborhood, but it also makes the property more affordable and attractive to buyers who want a newer home without the price tag of a custom build.
2. The assessed value is $468k. Is this the market price?
Not exactly. An assessed value is the city's estimate for property tax purposes, not a market valuation. In Winnipeg, assessed values often lag behind the market, or sometimes overshoot it if the area has declined. Given this home is newer and ranks above average for the city, the market price may be higher than the assessment, but you would need to check recent sold prices for similar newer homes in West Kildonan Industrial to be sure.
3. West Kildonan Industrial is an unusual name for a residential neighborhood. What is the area actually like?
The neighborhood is a mix of industrial and older residential zones. It is not a traditional, leafy suburb. Some streets are purely industrial, while pockets, like Orion Crescent, are residential. This means you may have good access to major roads and commercial areas, but the character of the neighborhood is less "quiet residential cul-de-sac" and more "practical, workable area." It suits someone who values the house itself over the street's aesthetic.
4. The house is in the top 3% newest in all of Winnipeg. Is that a meaningful statistic?
Yes. In a city where the average home is from 1966, a 2020 build is rare. This is genuinely a standout feature. It implies the home meets modern building codes (better insulation, electrical, and plumbing), likely has a more open floor plan common in contemporary builds, and will require fewer major repairs in the short term than 95% of homes in the city. For a buyer tired of older homes, this is the primary selling point.
5. How does the living space compare to other homes in the area?
On its own street, it is on the smaller side (1,510 sqft vs. 1,812 average). In the broader community, it is right around average. City-wide, it is above average. So you are getting a home that feels spacious compared to a typical Winnipeg house, but is actually modest for its immediate neighbors. The interior will not feel cramped, but you are not getting the largest unit on the block.