Rapidly aging suburbs pose a challenge to residents, urban planners alike
TORONTO — Superheated housing market notwithstanding, 81-year-old Ashley Anthony says he has no plans to give up the detached three-bedroom suburban house he has lived in for the past 43 years.
His three kids have long since moved out, but this corner of Brampton, Ont., northwest of Toronto, is still home for Anthony and his 77-year-old wife Gladys.
“Most of the people here are retired. It’s very quiet. There’s no noise and confusion here,” he reasons. “We know everybody here, we’re comfortable, so why should we move?”
Anthony is far from alone. Canada’s suburbs — the bedroom communities, towns and cities that surround major urban centres like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver — are going grey far more quickly than their hustle-and-bustle counterparts, the latest census numbers show.


