If you want to understand where Ottawa’s restaurant scene is actually going, spend an afternoon in Hintonburg and on Preston Street. These two adjacent neighbourhoods β sometimes lumped together, each with its own distinct character β have attracted a disproportionate number of the city’s most ambitious independent restaurateurs. The food here is less predictable than in other parts of Ottawa, and that’s the point.
Wellington Street West: Hintonburg’s Main Strip
Wellington Street West through Hintonburg has evolved from a gritty industrial stretch into one of Ottawa’s most interesting food streets. The neighbourhood attracts chefs who want to do things their own way β smaller menus, more seasonal sourcing, tighter operations β and the result is a street with genuinely distinctive restaurants rather than a row of generic options. It’s a good date-night neighbourhood: walkable, low-key, with enough variety that two people with different tastes can both find something.
Preston Street: Italian Roots, Expanded Mandate
Preston Street earned its “Little Italy” label from the Italian community that anchored it for decades, and there are still solid Italian spots here. But the strip has expanded well beyond pasta. You’ll find Vietnamese, Thai, Lebanese, and contemporary Canadian spots now sharing space with the old-school Italian restaurants. It’s a more casual strip than Wellington West β good for a quick lunch or a relaxed early dinner.
What to Know Before You Go
Many Hintonburg spots are small β reservations are worth making for dinner at the better-known places. Wellington Street has limited paid parking but the neighbourhood is very bikeable from downtown Ottawa (it’s basically flat). On summer evenings the patios fill fast. Lunch is underutilized here compared to the dinner crowd, which means you can often walk into a great lunch spot without waiting.