
Livingstone Point Provincial Park is a 1,800 hectare nature reserve on the shore of Lake Nipigon. Ontario Parks lists the park as established in 1985 and describes it as a remote and relatively undisturbed reserve containing regionally rare arctic and alpine plants.
The official description is brief, but it gives the park a precise conservation identity. This is a Lake Nipigon nature reserve page, not a developed campground or beach page.
Livingstone Point matters for travellers researching remote northwestern Ontario protected areas, Lake Nipigon shorelines, and rare plant habitat. The presence of regionally rare arctic and alpine plants is the key official fact, and it should shape visitor expectations toward restraint and sensitivity.
Ontario Parks says there are no visitor facilities. That makes the park most appropriate for careful planning, conservation research, and low-impact nature appreciation by visitors who are prepared for remote conditions and who can avoid damaging fragile plant communities.
Because the park is on Lake Nipigon, lake weather, access, and remoteness can matter as much as the reserve boundary itself. Treat current conditions and maps as part of the visit, not optional extras.
Plan around Lake Nipigon shoreline research, rare arctic and alpine plant awareness, nature reserve study, remote photography, map review, and nearby service planning before travelling into the area.
Confirm access, maps, no-facility expectations, sensitive plant guidance, Lake Nipigon conditions, weather, alerts, emergency planning, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.