Five Points Neighborhood (Detroit, MI) — History, Culture, and Street Geography of the 26 Zone

  

Detroit’s 48219 area, Five Points aka “5Points”

 Five Points—often written “5Points,” “5Point,” or “26 ZONE”—sits on Detroit’s far northwest side where Seven Mile Road, Grand River Avenue, and Five Points Street meet in a five-pointed junction. The name comes from this crossroads, marking Detroit’s edge before Redford Township. On one side lies suburbia; on the other, the rhythm of the city.

History

 Five Points became part of Detroit in 1929 after annexation from Redford Township. Most homes were built between 1948 and 1965, creating a working-class neighborhood of brick bungalows, narrow lawns, and postwar optimism. Industrial strips along Grand River and Telegraph brought auto shops and warehouses that shaped the area’s identity.



Geography & Demographics

 The neighborhood stretches across the 48219 ZIP code and follows the Rouge River along its western edge. The population is roughly 3,000—about 71% Black, with a growing Hispanic and Arab-American community. Family networks run deep; many residents live near where they grew up.





Culture & Landmarks

 Five Points hosts Detroit nightlife staples like Opyum Lounge, City Limits Grill 313, Demi’s, and Views Bar & Grill—all Black-owned businesses anchoring weekend life. The area balances calm residential streets with commercial flow along Grand River and Seven Mile.

In 2015, an Army veteran working security at Opyum Lounge was killed after asking a patron to leave, underscoring how quickly Detroit’s nightlife can turn from energy to tragedy.





Street Dynamics

 Since the early 2000s, Five Points has appeared on Detroit’s “street map”—a term used for informal territorial zones. Blood-affiliated sets like the Bounty Hunna Watts Bloods and Black P. Stones were visible in graffiti as early as 2007 near the Rouge–Telegraph corridor. Later, Crip-aligned groups such as the 7 Mile Rollin’ 60s and 7 Mile Playboy Gangster Crips emerged, drawing ATF attention in 2016-18 after high-profile shootings.


 By the late 2010s, several local Crip cliques formed around Five Points: R60s NHC, GPG, B.S.S., and N.S.S. Some merged into the Hyena Crips (83GC), also known as ScoreGang (SCRG)In 2025, The Detroit News reported on graffiti rivalries and alliance patterns between Crip- and Blood-affiliated gangs, noting that the Hyena Crips (83GC) were identified as part of the informal 5Point Nation (5PN) network—an alliance connecting several Crip-aligned groups in the Five Points neighborhood.



Local Sets Referenced in Public Records and Media:

Hyena Crips (83GC)

Black P. Stones (BPSN)

• Rollin’ 60s Neighborhood Crips (RSC NHC)

• Rollin’ 40s Neighborhood Crips (RFC NHC)

• Rollin’ Neighborhood Crips (e.g., 113OBC)

5Point Nation Alliance (TLK, 24BLK, 26G, etc.)

• Pirus (historical)

• Vice Lords (historical)





Modern Identity

 Today, Five Points is more than its past. Arab-American entrepreneurs like Moe Saad of Twins Auto Sales have revived local business corridors. Community groups clean streets and organize youth programs along Grand River. Despite tension, residents show a strong neighborhood identity and “26 Zone” pride.





Conclusion

Five Points is Detroit in miniature—hard, loyal, and enduring. Neighbors sweep sidewalks, kids bike cracked curbs, and summer cookouts light the township line. It remains a living intersection of memory, resilience, and grit.


See the Five Points Interactive Map








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