37
23
65%
8
4
Thirty-seven restaurants compete for customers on and around Corydon Avenue in Winnipeg — and that's before you count the 8 cafés, 9 fast food spots, 2 bars, and 2 pubs sharing the same neighbourhood. With 58 total food-service businesses in a compact area, the density is significant.
The cuisine mix is surprisingly varied: 23 distinct cuisine types across 37 restaurants. Asian food leads, with Chinese (4), sushi (3), and Asian fusion concepts present. Italian matches sushi at 3 restaurants, while Greek (2) and Middle Eastern (2) round out the established categories. A pancake house and a diner cover breakfast and comfort food demand, showing that not everything here is dinner-focused.
Website adoption sits at 65% — 24 of 37 restaurants maintain a web presence. That leaves 13 restaurants, more than a third of the market, without a website. For operators who invest in even a basic online presence, this gap is a clear competitive advantage.
Notable digitally active businesses include Café 22, Pizza Hut, Smitty's, Sushi Ya, The Roost on Corydon, Asian Hot Pot, Hello Asian Fusion, and Passero. The blend of national chains and independent operators means competition plays out at multiple levels simultaneously.
Cuisine diversity sets expectations high
With 23 cuisine types across 37 restaurants, Corydon diners choose based on mood and craving — not just proximity. A generic menu won't cut it when there's this much variety within walking distance.
Asian food dominates the block
Chinese, sushi, and Asian fusion are the most common cuisines, so customers comparing these spots look closely at menu freshness, authenticity, and whether the experience justifies choosing one over the other.
Breakfast demand is real
A pancake house, diner, and several cafés signal that morning and weekend brunch traffic matters here — diners want reliable options before noon, not just after five.
They check online before they walk in
Over a third of local restaurants have no website, so customers default to the ones they can find menus, hours, and photos for without much effort.
Patio and curb appeal win foot traffic
Corydon is a walkable strip where many diners decide in the moment. A visible patio, clean storefront, and readable signage directly influence whether someone stops or walks past.
A sample of real restaurants in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| Café 22 | Pizza |
| Wako Sushi | Sushi |
| Pizza Hut | Pizza |
| Nikos Restaurant | Greek |
| Garwood Grill | Restaurant |
| Smitty's | Pancake |
| Sushi Ya | Japanese |
| Arabesque Hookah Cafe & Restaurant | Turkish |
| The Roost on Corydon | Restaurant |
| Asian Hot Pot | Chinese |
| Hello Asian Fusion | Asian |
| Passero | Restaurant |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get your website up now
35% of Corydon restaurants have no website at all. A basic site with your menu, hours, and location puts you ahead of more than a dozen competitors who are invisible in online search. Even a simple one-page site changes how easily customers find you.
Differentiate within your cuisine category
If you serve Chinese, Italian, or sushi, you're competing directly against 3 other restaurants in the same category. Lead with a specific angle — a signature dish, a unique atmosphere, or a price point that doesn't blend into the rest of the strip.
Consider adding a morning or brunch menu
The neighbourhood supports a pancake house, a diner, and multiple cafés, which signals real demand before noon. Even if you're primarily a dinner operation, a weekend brunch or early-hours offering can capture customers your competitors aren't reaching.
With 37 restaurants and 58 total food businesses in one neighbourhood, Corydon is one of Winnipeg's densest dining corridors. Asian cuisines and Italian are well-represented — Chinese, sushi, and pizza spots compete directly within their own categories. Meanwhile, 35% of restaurants still lack a website, creating a clear split between digitally visible operators and those relying purely on walk-in traffic. Chains like Pizza Hut operate alongside independents like The Roost on Corydon and Passero, so brand recognition alone won't carry the day. Standing out here demands a clear niche, a strong online presence, and a reason for diners to choose your door over the one next to it.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.