Some Italian neighborhoods may have other names, but are colloquially referred to as "Little Italy", including:
Argentina •
La Boca, Buenos Aires
Australia •
Norton Street: in the
Sydney suburb of
Leichhardt • Ramsay Street: in the
Sydney suburb of
Haberfield •
Campbelltown/
Athelstone in
Adelaide •
New Farm in
Brisbane •
New Italy, New South Wales Brazil •
Mooca, São Paulo •
Bixiga, São Paulo •
Santa Felicidade, Curitiba, Paraná •
Savassi, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais Canada •
St. Leonard, a borough of Montreal with a large Italian population •
LaSalle, a borough in Montreal with a large Italian population •
Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles, another borough of Montreal with a prominent Italian population •
Corso Italia, a neighbourhood in Toronto •
Vaughan, Ontario, a city in north of Toronto with a high population of Italians •
Stoney Creek, Hamilton, Ontario •
North Burnaby, British Columbia
Chile •
Barrio Italia, Ñuñoa, Santiago de Chile •
Capitán Pastene, northwest
Temuco Kenya •
Malindi District, Kilifi County
South Africa •
Orange Grove, Johannesburg
United Kingdom •
Bedford, where the population is about 8% Italian or of Italian heritage. •
Hoddesdon, in
Hertfordshire, has a large
Sicilian population. •
Glasgow is the centre of the
Scottish Italian community.
United States • Spaghetti Hill,
Monterey, California • Little Italy/Morse Park Historic District,
Wheat Ridge, Colorado •
Thompsonville (Enfield), Connecticut •
Italia in northern Florida •
Pompano Beach, Florida; a section is partially an Italian neighborhood. •
Taylor Street Archives, Chicago, Illinois (the port-of-call for Chicago's Italian Americans) •
Heart of Italy, Chicago, Illinois •
Little Sicily, Chicago, Illinois •
Bridgeport, Chicago, Illinois •
Dunning, Chicago • Holy Rosary Neighborhood,
Indianapolis, Indiana • South Des Moines,
Des Moines, Iowa •
Old Forge, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania (also known as "The Pizza Capital of the World" for their pizza) •
Little Italy, Baltimore, Maryland •
North End, Boston, Massachusetts • Columbus Park,
Kansas City, Missouri •
The Hill,
St. Louis, Missouri • North East,
Kansas City, Missouri (formerly Columbus Square) •
Eastern Market,
Detroit, Michigan, considered to be the city's "Little Italy" •
Little Italy, Omaha, Nebraska •
Seventh Avenue, Newark, New Jersey • Varick Street,
Utica, New York • Dominick Street,
Rome, New York • North Side,
Buffalo, New York, though "Little Italy" was considered the West Side of the city •
Schenectady, New York, proposed "Little Italy" from Hillary Clinton, to run through sections of downtown. •
Utica, New York, East Side considered to be city's "Little Italy" •
Brier Hill, Youngstown, Ohio •
Italian Village (Columbus), Ohio •
Easton, Pennsylvania •
Johnston, Rhode Island has the highest percentage of Italian Americans of any municipality in the country. •
Galveston, Texas, south of
Houston, highest Italian-American population in the Greater Houston as well as Texas. •
Judiciary Square, Washington, D.C. • == See also ==