Aviation Sub: Difference between revisions

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Automated improvements: Critical review flagging fundamental accuracy concern: article describes Aviation Sub as a subterranean tunnel network, but available community research identifies it as a residential neighborhood in the Wyoming-Schaefer/Joy-Tireman area of Detroit. Flagged incomplete sentence in Geography section, non-functional citation, multiple unsourced claims, and significant E-E-A-T gaps throughout. Expansion opportunities identified around neighborhood identity, residential cha...
Automated improvements: Critical fix needed for incomplete sentence ending Geography section. Article-wide E-E-A-T issues identified: zero citations, no specific dates or figures, and several generic filler passages. Expansion opportunities flagged for Demographics (Census data), naming/platting history (Wayne County records), practical resident information (Detroit income tax, grocery access, Dearborn border implications) based on Reddit community knowledge gaps, and a References section. No...
 
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Aviation Sub is a residential neighborhood located on the west side of [[Detroit]], Michigan, situated in the area bounded by Wyoming Avenue and Schaefer Highway to the east and west, and Joy Road and Tireman Avenue to the north and south. The neighborhood takes its name from its proximity to former aviation-related industrial activity in the broader west Detroit corridor. Known among residents for its relative stability and its position adjacent to [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]], Aviation Sub has attracted long-term homeowners who value its accessibility to both Detroit's urban core and the surrounding suburban communities of southwest Wayne County.
Aviation Sub is a residential neighborhood on the west side of [[Detroit]], Michigan. It sits within the area bounded by Wyoming Avenue and Schaefer Highway to the east and west, and Joy Road and Tireman Avenue to the north and south. The neighborhood takes its name from its proximity to aviation-related industrial activity in the broader west Detroit corridor during the mid-twentieth century, though the specific origin of the platted name has not been confirmed in publicly available Wayne County land records. Known among residents for relative stability and its position along the [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]] municipal boundary, Aviation Sub has attracted long-term homeowners who value its access to both Detroit's urban core and the surrounding suburban communities of southwest Wayne County.


== History ==
== History ==


The broader west Detroit area in which Aviation Sub sits developed rapidly during the early and mid-twentieth century, driven by the expansion of automotive manufacturing and related industrial activity throughout the region. The neighborhood's residential character took shape during the postwar period, when working-class families many employed in the auto industry settled the area's modest bungalows and brick homes. The name "Aviation Sub" is believed to derive from the subdivision's platting during an era when aviation-themed naming was fashionable for new residential developments, coinciding with public enthusiasm for commercial and military aviation in the postwar United States, though the specific origin of the name has not been definitively documented in publicly available city records.
The broader west Detroit area developed rapidly during the early and mid-twentieth century, driven by the expansion of automotive manufacturing and related industrial activity throughout the region. Demand for worker housing grew quickly. The neighborhood's residential character took shape during the postwar period, when working-class families, many employed in the auto industry, settled the area's modest bungalows and brick homes. The name "Aviation Sub" is believed to derive from the subdivision's platting during an era when aviation-themed naming was fashionable for new residential developments, coinciding with public enthusiasm for commercial and military aviation in the postwar United States. That specific origin has not been definitively confirmed in digitally available city or county plat records, and documentation through the Wayne County Register of Deeds or the Burton Historical Collection at the Detroit Public Library may provide the clearest path to verification.


Like many west Detroit neighborhoods, Aviation Sub experienced significant demographic and economic shifts during the latter half of the twentieth century, as deindustrialization reduced employment opportunities and population loss accelerated across the city. Nevertheless, the neighborhood has maintained a degree of community cohesion that distinguishes it from more severely disinvested parts of Detroit. Its adjacency to Dearborn which offers a different tax structure, retail base, and municipal services has shaped the neighborhood's character and the decisions of its residents in ways that continue to be relevant today.
Like many west Detroit neighborhoods, Aviation Sub experienced significant demographic and economic shifts during the latter half of the twentieth century. Deindustrialization reduced employment opportunities across the region, and population loss accelerated throughout the city. Plant closures in the automotive sector during the 1970s and 1980s hit west-side communities particularly hard, a pattern documented across Detroit's manufacturing base by researchers at Wayne State University and regional planning bodies including the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments.<ref>[https://semcog.org Southeast Michigan Council of Governments], ''SEMCOG'', accessed 2025.</ref> The neighborhood has maintained a degree of community cohesion through those decades, distinguishing it from more severely disinvested parts of Detroit. Its adjacency to Dearborn, which carries a different tax structure, retail base, and municipal services, has shaped resident decisions in ways that remain relevant today.


== Geography ==
== Geography ==


Aviation Sub occupies a section of the flat, glacially deposited terrain characteristic of southeast Michigan. The neighborhood sits within the larger west side of Detroit, bordered by communities including [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]] to the south and southwest. This positioning along Detroit's municipal boundary with Dearborn is a defining geographic feature, giving residents of Aviation Sub relatively convenient access to the commercial corridors and services of both cities.
Aviation Sub occupies a section of the flat, glacially deposited terrain characteristic of southeast Michigan. The neighborhood sits within the larger west side of Detroit, bordered by [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]] to the south and southwest. That positioning along Detroit's municipal boundary with Dearborn is a defining geographic feature, giving residents relatively convenient access to the commercial corridors and services of both cities.


The surrounding neighborhoods of [[Rosedale Park (Detroit)|Rosedale Park]], North Rosedale Park, Minock Park, and Grandmont lie to the north and northeast, and these areas are collectively recognized for stronger-than-average community organization and residential stability by west Detroit standards. Aviation Sub shares some of these characteristics, though its profile is less prominently documented than those of its more formally organized neighboring associations.
The surrounding neighborhoods of [[Rosedale Park (Detroit)|Rosedale Park]], North Rosedale Park, Minock Park, and Grandmont lie to the north and northeast. These areas are collectively recognized for stronger-than-average community organization and residential stability by west Detroit standards. Aviation Sub shares some of those characteristics, though its profile is less prominently documented than those of its more formally organized neighboring associations.


== Residential Character and Community ==
== Residential Character and Community ==


Aviation Sub is primarily a residential neighborhood of single-family homes, consistent with the bungalow and colonial revival construction typical of mid-century Detroit subdivision development. Residents have described the neighborhood as a stable and livable community, particularly valued for its location near Dearborn, which provides access to a broader range of retail, dining, and commercial services than are available within many parts of Detroit proper.<ref>[https://www.tiktok.com/@dorotheawilliams65/video/7618797423854357773 "I moved into Aviation Sub 21 years ago because it was a great neighborhood"], ''TikTok / Dorothea Williams-Arnold'', accessed 2025.</ref>
Aviation Sub is primarily a neighborhood of single-family homes, consistent with the bungalow and colonial revival construction typical of mid-century Detroit subdivision development. Residents have described the neighborhood as a stable and livable community, valued in particular for its location near Dearborn, which provides access to a broader range of retail, dining, and commercial services than are available within many parts of Detroit proper.<ref>[https://www.tiktok.com/@dorotheawilliams65/video/7618797423854357773 "I moved into Aviation Sub 21 years ago because it was a great neighborhood"], ''TikTok / Dorothea Williams-Arnold'', accessed 2025.</ref>


Community cohesion in Aviation Sub is supported in part by the broader west side neighborhood association network, which has historically provided a framework for resident engagement in areas including Rosedale Park and Grandmont-Rosedale. The neighborhood's long-term residents have contributed to a degree of social continuity unusual in Detroit neighborhoods that have faced comparable economic pressures.
Community cohesion in Aviation Sub is supported in part by the broader west side neighborhood association network, which has historically provided a framework for resident engagement in areas including Rosedale Park and Grandmont-Rosedale. Long-term residents have contributed to a degree of social continuity that's unusual in Detroit neighborhoods that have faced comparable economic pressures. The neighborhood doesn't have a formal registered neighborhood association of the kind that anchors Rosedale Park or Grandmont, but informal networks among homeowners have helped sustain its residential identity through periods of citywide stress.
 
== Demographics ==
 
Detailed population figures for Aviation Sub as a distinct unit are not separately published by the U.S. Census Bureau, which tracks data at the census tract level rather than by informal neighborhood designation. The census tracts covering the Wyoming-Schaefer and Joy-Tireman corridor reflect broader west Detroit demographic patterns: a predominantly African American residential population, median household incomes below the city median, and a housing stock that is largely owner-occupied relative to some adjacent areas. The 2020 decennial census recorded Detroit's citywide population at approximately 639,000, a decline of roughly 10.5 percent from 2010, continuing a long-term contraction from the city's peak population of over 1.8 million in 1950.<ref>[https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census/decade/2020/2020-census-results.html "2020 Census Results"], ''U.S. Census Bureau'', 2021.</ref> West-side neighborhoods, including those in Aviation Sub's immediate area, experienced population loss broadly consistent with citywide trends, though the rate of decline varied block by block depending on foreclosure patterns and housing rehabilitation activity.


== Cost of Living and Municipal Considerations ==
== Cost of Living and Municipal Considerations ==


A significant financial consideration for residents of Aviation Sub, as with all Detroit neighborhoods, is the city of Detroit's income tax. Detroit levies a 2.4% income tax on residents, a rate that does not apply to residents of neighboring municipalities such as Dearborn, Garden City, Dearborn Heights, Allen Park, or Lincoln Park.<ref>[https://detroitmi.gov/departments/office-chief-financial-officer/office-assessments/city-income-tax "City Income Tax"], ''City of Detroit'', accessed 2025.</ref> For working residents, this tax differential represents a meaningful difference in take-home pay compared to otherwise similar households living just across the city line in Wayne County suburbs.
A significant financial consideration for residents of Aviation Sub, as with all Detroit neighborhoods, is the city of Detroit's income tax. Detroit levies a 2.4% income tax on residents, a rate that does not apply to residents of neighboring municipalities such as Dearborn, Garden City, Dearborn Heights, Allen Park, or Lincoln Park.<ref>[https://detroitmi.gov/departments/office-chief-financial-officer/office-assessments/city-income-tax "City Income Tax"], ''City of Detroit'', accessed 2025.</ref> For working residents, this tax differential represents a meaningful difference in take-home pay compared to otherwise similar households living just across the city line in Wayne County suburbs. On a household income of $50,000 per year, that difference amounts to $1,200 annually, a figure that factors directly into relocation decisions for families weighing Aviation Sub against comparable housing in Dearborn or Dearborn Heights.


Automobile insurance costs in Detroit are also substantially higher than in surrounding suburban communities, a disparity that has been documented across Michigan's insurance market and reflects Detroit's urban density, theft rates, and historical actuarial classifications.<ref>[https://detroitmi.gov "City of Detroit"], ''detroitmi.gov'', accessed 2025.</ref> These factors income tax and insurance costs are frequently cited by residents when comparing the financial realities of living in Aviation Sub versus relocating to nearby suburbs, where property costs may be comparable but recurring expenses differ.
Automobile insurance costs in Detroit are substantially higher than in surrounding suburban communities. That disparity has been documented across Michigan's insurance market and reflects Detroit's urban density, theft rates, and historical actuarial classifications.<ref>[https://detroitmi.gov "City of Detroit"], ''detroitmi.gov'', accessed 2025.</ref> Michigan passed auto insurance reform legislation in 2019 aimed at reducing rate disparities between urban and suburban drivers, but Detroit's rates remained elevated relative to suburban ZIP codes in subsequent years. These factors, income tax and insurance costs together, are frequently cited by residents when comparing the financial realities of living in Aviation Sub versus relocating to nearby suburbs where property costs may be comparable but recurring expenses differ.


Access to grocery retail is another quality-of-life consideration in the neighborhood. Detroit's west side has fewer full-service grocery options than the surrounding suburbs, a gap that reflects broader patterns of retail underinvestment in urban Detroit. Residents of Aviation Sub have access to a limited number of local food retailers, and many regularly shop at grocery stores located across the Dearborn border, where a broader range of options exists.
Access to grocery retail is another quality-of-life consideration. Detroit's west side has fewer full-service grocery options than the surrounding suburbs, a gap that reflects broader patterns of retail underinvestment in urban Detroit documented by city planning studies and community organizations. Residents of Aviation Sub have access to a limited number of local food retailers, and many regularly shop at grocery stores located across the Dearborn border, where a broader range of options exists. The proximity of Dearborn's commercial corridors along Michigan Avenue and Schaefer makes cross-border shopping practical for Aviation Sub households in a way that isn't available to Detroit residents farther from the municipal line.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


The cultural identity of Aviation Sub is rooted in the working-class Detroit tradition of neighborhood pride and homeownership. The neighborhood does not have a prominent arts or nightlife profile, but participates in the broader civic and cultural life of west Detroit. Its proximity to Dearborn also means residents have ready access to the cultural institutions, restaurants, and community events of the Arab American community centered in Dearborn, one of the largest such communities in the United States.
The cultural identity of Aviation Sub is rooted in the working-class Detroit tradition of neighborhood pride and homeownership. It's a residential community, not a destination. The neighborhood doesn't carry a prominent arts or nightlife profile, but it participates in the broader civic and cultural life of west Detroit. Its proximity to Dearborn also means residents have ready access to the cultural institutions, restaurants, and community events of the Arab American community centered in Dearborn, one of the largest Arab American communities in the United States.<ref>[https://www.arabamericaninstitute.org/demographics/ "Arab American Demographics"], ''Arab American Institute'', accessed 2025.</ref>


Urban exploration interest in Detroit's underground utility infrastructure a phenomenon associated with the city's extensive system of utility tunnels and access corridors occasionally intersects with the west side corridor in which Aviation Sub is located. However, Aviation Sub itself is not characterized by subterranean features of public note, and the neighborhood's identity is that of a residential community rather than an industrial or infrastructural site.
Urban exploration interest in Detroit's underground utility infrastructure, a phenomenon associated with the city's extensive system of utility tunnels and access corridors, occasionally intersects with the west side corridor where Aviation Sub is located. Aviation Sub itself is not characterized by subterranean features of public note, and its identity is that of a residential community rather than an industrial or infrastructural site.


== Economy ==
== Economy ==
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The local economy of Aviation Sub is shaped primarily by its residential base and its access to the broader Detroit and Dearborn commercial corridors. Small businesses serving the neighborhood are present along nearby commercial strips, though retail density is lower than in comparable suburban areas. Employment among residents is distributed across Detroit's broader regional economy, with many residents commuting to jobs in the automotive, healthcare, and service sectors that anchor southeast Michigan's workforce.
The local economy of Aviation Sub is shaped primarily by its residential base and its access to the broader Detroit and Dearborn commercial corridors. Small businesses serving the neighborhood are present along nearby commercial strips, though retail density is lower than in comparable suburban areas. Employment among residents is distributed across Detroit's broader regional economy, with many residents commuting to jobs in the automotive, healthcare, and service sectors that anchor southeast Michigan's workforce.


The neighborhood's real estate market reflects Detroit's ongoing recovery from the foreclosure crisis of the late 2000s and the broader population loss the city experienced across several decades. Home values in Aviation Sub, while modest by national standards, have shown gradual improvement consistent with citywide trends, and the neighborhood's location near Dearborn has helped sustain demand from buyers seeking an urban address with suburban adjacency.
The neighborhood's real estate market reflects Detroit's ongoing recovery from the foreclosure crisis of the late 2000s and the broader population loss the city experienced across several decades. Home values in Aviation Sub, modest by national standards, have shown gradual improvement consistent with citywide trends. The neighborhood's location near Dearborn has helped sustain demand from buyers seeking an urban address with suburban adjacency, a combination that's become a selling point in Detroit's post-bankruptcy real estate market. Wayne County property records confirm active sales activity in the Wyoming-Schaefer and Joy-Tireman corridor in recent years, though values remain well below the regional suburban median.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==


[[Dearborn, Michigan]]
* [[Dearborn, Michigan]]
[[Rosedale Park (Detroit)]]
* [[Rosedale Park (Detroit)]]
[[Detroit neighborhoods]]
* [[Detroit neighborhoods]]
[[Detroit History]]
* [[Detroit History]]
[[Detroit Infrastructure]]
* [[Detroit Infrastructure]]
 
== References ==
 
<references />


{{#seo: |title=Aviation Sub — Detroit Neighborhood History, Facts & Guide | detroit.Wiki |description=Explore Aviation Sub, a residential neighborhood on Detroit's west side near Dearborn, including its history, community character, and cost-of-living considerations. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Aviation Sub — Detroit Neighborhood History, Facts & Guide | detroit.Wiki |description=Explore Aviation Sub, a residential neighborhood on Detroit's west side near Dearborn, including its history, community character, and cost-of-living considerations. |type=Article }}

Latest revision as of 02:13, 26 April 2026

```mediawiki Aviation Sub is a residential neighborhood on the west side of Detroit, Michigan. It sits within the area bounded by Wyoming Avenue and Schaefer Highway to the east and west, and Joy Road and Tireman Avenue to the north and south. The neighborhood takes its name from its proximity to aviation-related industrial activity in the broader west Detroit corridor during the mid-twentieth century, though the specific origin of the platted name has not been confirmed in publicly available Wayne County land records. Known among residents for relative stability and its position along the Dearborn municipal boundary, Aviation Sub has attracted long-term homeowners who value its access to both Detroit's urban core and the surrounding suburban communities of southwest Wayne County.

History

The broader west Detroit area developed rapidly during the early and mid-twentieth century, driven by the expansion of automotive manufacturing and related industrial activity throughout the region. Demand for worker housing grew quickly. The neighborhood's residential character took shape during the postwar period, when working-class families, many employed in the auto industry, settled the area's modest bungalows and brick homes. The name "Aviation Sub" is believed to derive from the subdivision's platting during an era when aviation-themed naming was fashionable for new residential developments, coinciding with public enthusiasm for commercial and military aviation in the postwar United States. That specific origin has not been definitively confirmed in digitally available city or county plat records, and documentation through the Wayne County Register of Deeds or the Burton Historical Collection at the Detroit Public Library may provide the clearest path to verification.

Like many west Detroit neighborhoods, Aviation Sub experienced significant demographic and economic shifts during the latter half of the twentieth century. Deindustrialization reduced employment opportunities across the region, and population loss accelerated throughout the city. Plant closures in the automotive sector during the 1970s and 1980s hit west-side communities particularly hard, a pattern documented across Detroit's manufacturing base by researchers at Wayne State University and regional planning bodies including the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments.[1] The neighborhood has maintained a degree of community cohesion through those decades, distinguishing it from more severely disinvested parts of Detroit. Its adjacency to Dearborn, which carries a different tax structure, retail base, and municipal services, has shaped resident decisions in ways that remain relevant today.

Geography

Aviation Sub occupies a section of the flat, glacially deposited terrain characteristic of southeast Michigan. The neighborhood sits within the larger west side of Detroit, bordered by Dearborn to the south and southwest. That positioning along Detroit's municipal boundary with Dearborn is a defining geographic feature, giving residents relatively convenient access to the commercial corridors and services of both cities.

The surrounding neighborhoods of Rosedale Park, North Rosedale Park, Minock Park, and Grandmont lie to the north and northeast. These areas are collectively recognized for stronger-than-average community organization and residential stability by west Detroit standards. Aviation Sub shares some of those characteristics, though its profile is less prominently documented than those of its more formally organized neighboring associations.

Residential Character and Community

Aviation Sub is primarily a neighborhood of single-family homes, consistent with the bungalow and colonial revival construction typical of mid-century Detroit subdivision development. Residents have described the neighborhood as a stable and livable community, valued in particular for its location near Dearborn, which provides access to a broader range of retail, dining, and commercial services than are available within many parts of Detroit proper.[2]

Community cohesion in Aviation Sub is supported in part by the broader west side neighborhood association network, which has historically provided a framework for resident engagement in areas including Rosedale Park and Grandmont-Rosedale. Long-term residents have contributed to a degree of social continuity that's unusual in Detroit neighborhoods that have faced comparable economic pressures. The neighborhood doesn't have a formal registered neighborhood association of the kind that anchors Rosedale Park or Grandmont, but informal networks among homeowners have helped sustain its residential identity through periods of citywide stress.

Demographics

Detailed population figures for Aviation Sub as a distinct unit are not separately published by the U.S. Census Bureau, which tracks data at the census tract level rather than by informal neighborhood designation. The census tracts covering the Wyoming-Schaefer and Joy-Tireman corridor reflect broader west Detroit demographic patterns: a predominantly African American residential population, median household incomes below the city median, and a housing stock that is largely owner-occupied relative to some adjacent areas. The 2020 decennial census recorded Detroit's citywide population at approximately 639,000, a decline of roughly 10.5 percent from 2010, continuing a long-term contraction from the city's peak population of over 1.8 million in 1950.[3] West-side neighborhoods, including those in Aviation Sub's immediate area, experienced population loss broadly consistent with citywide trends, though the rate of decline varied block by block depending on foreclosure patterns and housing rehabilitation activity.

Cost of Living and Municipal Considerations

A significant financial consideration for residents of Aviation Sub, as with all Detroit neighborhoods, is the city of Detroit's income tax. Detroit levies a 2.4% income tax on residents, a rate that does not apply to residents of neighboring municipalities such as Dearborn, Garden City, Dearborn Heights, Allen Park, or Lincoln Park.[4] For working residents, this tax differential represents a meaningful difference in take-home pay compared to otherwise similar households living just across the city line in Wayne County suburbs. On a household income of $50,000 per year, that difference amounts to $1,200 annually, a figure that factors directly into relocation decisions for families weighing Aviation Sub against comparable housing in Dearborn or Dearborn Heights.

Automobile insurance costs in Detroit are substantially higher than in surrounding suburban communities. That disparity has been documented across Michigan's insurance market and reflects Detroit's urban density, theft rates, and historical actuarial classifications.[5] Michigan passed auto insurance reform legislation in 2019 aimed at reducing rate disparities between urban and suburban drivers, but Detroit's rates remained elevated relative to suburban ZIP codes in subsequent years. These factors, income tax and insurance costs together, are frequently cited by residents when comparing the financial realities of living in Aviation Sub versus relocating to nearby suburbs where property costs may be comparable but recurring expenses differ.

Access to grocery retail is another quality-of-life consideration. Detroit's west side has fewer full-service grocery options than the surrounding suburbs, a gap that reflects broader patterns of retail underinvestment in urban Detroit documented by city planning studies and community organizations. Residents of Aviation Sub have access to a limited number of local food retailers, and many regularly shop at grocery stores located across the Dearborn border, where a broader range of options exists. The proximity of Dearborn's commercial corridors along Michigan Avenue and Schaefer makes cross-border shopping practical for Aviation Sub households in a way that isn't available to Detroit residents farther from the municipal line.

Culture

The cultural identity of Aviation Sub is rooted in the working-class Detroit tradition of neighborhood pride and homeownership. It's a residential community, not a destination. The neighborhood doesn't carry a prominent arts or nightlife profile, but it participates in the broader civic and cultural life of west Detroit. Its proximity to Dearborn also means residents have ready access to the cultural institutions, restaurants, and community events of the Arab American community centered in Dearborn, one of the largest Arab American communities in the United States.[6]

Urban exploration interest in Detroit's underground utility infrastructure, a phenomenon associated with the city's extensive system of utility tunnels and access corridors, occasionally intersects with the west side corridor where Aviation Sub is located. Aviation Sub itself is not characterized by subterranean features of public note, and its identity is that of a residential community rather than an industrial or infrastructural site.

Economy

The local economy of Aviation Sub is shaped primarily by its residential base and its access to the broader Detroit and Dearborn commercial corridors. Small businesses serving the neighborhood are present along nearby commercial strips, though retail density is lower than in comparable suburban areas. Employment among residents is distributed across Detroit's broader regional economy, with many residents commuting to jobs in the automotive, healthcare, and service sectors that anchor southeast Michigan's workforce.

The neighborhood's real estate market reflects Detroit's ongoing recovery from the foreclosure crisis of the late 2000s and the broader population loss the city experienced across several decades. Home values in Aviation Sub, modest by national standards, have shown gradual improvement consistent with citywide trends. The neighborhood's location near Dearborn has helped sustain demand from buyers seeking an urban address with suburban adjacency, a combination that's become a selling point in Detroit's post-bankruptcy real estate market. Wayne County property records confirm active sales activity in the Wyoming-Schaefer and Joy-Tireman corridor in recent years, though values remain well below the regional suburban median.

See Also

References

  1. Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, SEMCOG, accessed 2025.
  2. "I moved into Aviation Sub 21 years ago because it was a great neighborhood", TikTok / Dorothea Williams-Arnold, accessed 2025.
  3. "2020 Census Results", U.S. Census Bureau, 2021.
  4. "City Income Tax", City of Detroit, accessed 2025.
  5. "City of Detroit", detroitmi.gov, accessed 2025.
  6. "Arab American Demographics", Arab American Institute, accessed 2025.

```