South Pickering · Pickering
Rougemount - quiet far-west streets by the Rouge
Rougemount sits at the western edge of Pickering against the Rouge River and the Rouge National Urban Park, with established detached streets and direct trail access.
Rougemount overview
Rougemount is one of the 15 south urban neighbourhoods in Pickering, occupying the western edge of the city against the Rouge River - the boundary with the City of Toronto. Bounded approximately by Rougemount Drive / the Rouge River to the west, Whites Road to the east, Hwy 401 to the south and Finch Avenue to the north.
Housing in Rougemount is dominated by 1960s-1980s detached homes on 40-60 ft lots, with mature trees, established streets, and a quiet, secluded feel from being tucked against the Rouge.
Rougemount's defining feature is its direct access to the Rouge National Urban Park - Canada's first urban national park, 79.5 square kilometres of protected trails, river and forest. The Rougemount Park trailheads provide direct entry to the park's western trail network.
Schools include the catchments of Dunbarton HS and St. Mary CSS, plus several DDSB and DCDSB elementary options. The community is quiet, family-oriented and has very low turnover - households tend to stay.
From a real estate perspective Rougemount is one of Pickering's quieter, more loyal markets, with a small but consistent buyer pool that specifically wants the Rouge-adjacent lifestyle. The Krzewski Group works it with the same proper, editorial marketing we use everywhere else.
Rougemount at a glance
The community in numbers and character
- Location
- Far west Pickering against the Rouge River and the City of Toronto boundary.
- Typical housing
- 1960s-1980s detached homes on 40-60 ft lots, established streets, mature trees.
- Market character
- Quiet, loyal west-Pickering market with a clear premium for Rouge-adjacent streets.
- Who it suits
- Rougemount is for buyers who want a quiet, family-oriented neighbourhood with direct access to Canada's first urban national park.
- Direct Rouge National Urban Park access
- Quiet, low-turnover streets
- Mature trees and established homes
- Short drive to Petticoat Creek and the lake

Lifestyle
Living in Rougemount
Rougemount is for buyers who want a quiet, family-oriented neighbourhood with direct access to Canada's first urban national park.
Schools. Dunbarton High School (DDSB); St. Mary Catholic Secondary School (DCDSB); Rosebank Road PS, Westcreek PS, and more.
Parks & lifestyle. Rouge National Urban Park; Petticoat Creek Conservation Area nearby; Rougemount Park trailheads; Lake Ontario waterfront short drive.
Schools, transit, parks
Practical details for Rougemount
Schools
- Dunbarton High School (DDSB)
- St. Mary Catholic Secondary School (DCDSB)
- Rosebank Road PS, Westcreek PS
- St. Anthony Daniel CES
Transit & access
- Pickering GO short drive
- Rouge Hill GO (Toronto side) short drive
- Hwy 401 along south
- Hwy 407 / 412 short drive north
Parks, shopping & lifestyle
- Rouge National Urban Park
- Petticoat Creek Conservation Area nearby
- Rougemount Park trailheads
- Lake Ontario waterfront short drive

How we work
The Krzewski Group in Rougemount
Whether you are buying your first home in Rougemount, upgrading from a starter, downsizing, leasing or selling an investment property, Daniel and Heather Krzewski bring the same disciplined process to every file. Editorial-grade photography, video and floor plans. Pricing built on live comparable data, not wishful thinking. Negotiation that protects every dollar of your equity.
As Sales Representatives at Crown North Realty Inc., Brokerage, with Daniel also serving as the brokerage's owner and president, you get owner-level accountability and a team that genuinely knows every street, every school catchment and every transit timeline in Rougemount.
Good to know
Frequently asked - Rougemount
Is Rougemount really right next to Rouge Park?
Yes - Rougemount's western edge is the Rouge River, which forms the boundary with the City of Toronto and the western edge of the Rouge National Urban Park. Several streets back onto park land.
Are Rougemount homes mostly newer or older?
Most are 1960s-1980s, with selective renovations and a few custom rebuilds. The mature streets and trees are part of what defines the area.
Is Rougemount good for commuters?
Yes - both Pickering GO and Rouge Hill GO are a 5-10 minute drive, with Hwy 401 immediately south. Many Rougemount residents work in downtown Toronto via the GO.
How does Rougemount differ from Rosebank?
Rougemount and Rosebank are adjacent west-end Pickering neighbourhoods. Rougemount sits north of Hwy 401 and is more directly Rouge-park focused; Rosebank sits south of Hwy 401, closer to the lake and Petticoat Creek.
Keep exploring
Communities near Rougemount
Let's talk
Thinking of buying or selling in Rougemount?
Daniel and Heather Krzewski work Rougemount actively. Whether you are buying, selling or leasing, get a sharp, evidence-based perspective on your move.
Prefer to talk now? (416) 551-1026