Stephenville Crossing - ClearSpot score: 100%
Last computed: - View on map
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About this place: Stephenville Crossing
Stephenville Crossing is a city in Canada. Population about 1,634. places_city_intro_fallback_clearspot
Key facts: Stephenville Crossing
- ClearSpot score: 100% (all clear)
- Country: Canada
- Population: 1,634
- Main environmental signal: noise
- Noise: 63%
- Wind turbines nearby: None documented within default radius
- Data last updated:
ClearSpot score
100%
With a score of 100%, Stephenville Crossing places in the upper tier of ClearSpot's global ranking, reflecting limited documented environmental burden at default thresholds.
Published tables use the same default thresholds for everyone so rankings stay comparable. On the home map, your tuned sensitivities still drive the live chip.
Environmental indicators
| Module | Score | What this means |
|---|---|---|
| Wind turbines | 0% | No wind turbines are documented within the ClearSpot database near Stephenville Crossing at default sensitivity radius. |
| Pollen | 0% | No significant pollen pressure detected within default ClearSpot thresholds for the current reference period. |
| Air quality | 0% | No air quality pressure detected within default ClearSpot thresholds for this location. |
| Noise | 63% | Noise is a significant pressure source for Stephenville Crossing (63%). Major transport infrastructure - motorway, railway, or airport corridor - contributes to the strategic noise burden. |
| Light pollution | 0% | Light pollution data shows no significant radiance pressure within default ClearSpot thresholds for this location. |
Live check at this pin
What the map would compute right now with default sensitivity thresholds (same assumption as our public tables). Opens the same modules as the home experience.
38%
Per-indicator burden (0–100)
Higher values mean more pressure against default thresholds for that module. They roll up into the headline ClearSpot score.
FAQ - Stephenville Crossing
Is this place healthy to live?
The overall ClearSpot score for Stephenville Crossing is 100% (computed on 2026-04-28 11:49:43). Significant noise from transport infrastructure. This represents a city-centre average; pollution, noise, and other factors can vary significantly across different parts of the city.
What is air quality like here?
Stephenville Crossing scores 0% on ClearSpot's air quality module. This is derived from monthly averages of PM2.5, PM10, NO2, ozone, and carbon monoxide from open government monitoring data. No documented exceedance of WHO 2021 guidelines was detected in the reference period.
Are there wind turbines nearby?
Based on ClearSpot's inventory, documents no wind turbines within the default sensitivity radius of Stephenville Crossing. The resulting pressure score is 0%. The database is updated weekly from open sources.
How noisy is it?
ClearSpot's noise module rates Stephenville Crossing at 63% burden. This is based on European strategic noise maps (EEA, END Directive 2002/49/EC) and modelled road noise from OpenStreetMap infrastructure. Major transport infrastructure is the dominant source of modelled noise burden for this city centre.
Stephenville Crossing - Canada
Stephenville Crossing ranks 1st out of 2746 scored cities in Canada on ClearSpot. It currently leads the national ranking.
Nearby places
- St. George's - ClearSpot 100%
- Stephenville - ClearSpot 100%
- Kippens - ClearSpot 100%
- Bay St. George South - ClearSpot 100%
- Humber Arm South - ClearSpot 100%
- Corner Brook - ClearSpot 100%
How to read this place
At default settings the indexed pressures are relatively high here. That is not a medical diagnosis; it is a prompt to inspect turbines, air, pollen, noise, and night-sky data in context and with your sensitivities.
Short-term vs long-term
In the short term, spikes come from weather, pollen season, construction, or night lighting—use the live map when deciding whether to open a window or plan outdoor time.
Over months and years, patterns matter for where you settle: turbine proximity, chronic noise corridors, recurring pollen sources, and persistent air basins. The blog and data guides explain how each layer is built.
Guides & further reading
Transparent scales, licensed upstream data, and how the headline score is assembled.