Lansing is a neighbourhood in the central area of the North York district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, which originated as a minor settlement of a store, other services and a post office at the corner of Yonge Street and Sheppard Avenue. A larger area was designated as the postal village of Lansing. The City of Toronto as labels it as Lansing-Westgate for neighbourhood planning purposes with the boundaries Yonge Street to the east, Highway 401 to the south, Bathurst Street to the west and Burnett Avenue to the north.
The Lansing area was developed into a residential neighbourhood of mostly single-family owned and occupied homes between 1910 and the 1950s. In the older portions nearest Yonge Street the homes are one- and two-storey pre-war houses while in the newest areas homes consist of modest one and-a-half-storey postwar houses. Lansing is generally filled with two distinct types of households, the first being older couples, usually with adult children, living in post-war bungalows, and the second being younger wealthy families living in “rebuilds” in which wealthy families buy one or two bungalows, tear them down and build two-million-dollar houses.