Five Points is a dense, mixed-use historic corridor where commercial food service, residential housing of multiple construction eras, and a continuous mature street tree canopy create overlapping Norway rat and roof rat pressure that neither business owners nor homeowners can fully address in isolation.
Five Points' character comes from its density -- restaurants, bars, and retail on the ground floor with residential above or immediately adjacent, all beneath an unbroken canopy of mature street trees. That density makes it one of Huntsville's most challenging rodent management zones. The restaurant operations sustain Norway rat populations in the alley systems and sewer infrastructure. The canopy delivers roof rats to rooflines on the residential housing immediately behind the commercial corridor.
Individual property rodent control in Five Points faces the corridor displacement problem: treatment in one property pushes rodents into adjacent properties through shared alley systems, sewer-adjacent infrastructure, and overhead canopy routes. Homeowners in Five Points see recurring rodent activity because the surrounding commercial corridor continuously repressures their properties regardless of how thorough any single treatment is.
Norway rat colonies established in Five Points' alley drainage systems and restaurant grease trap infrastructure are functionally impossible to fully eliminate from a single property -- they're embedded in the shared infrastructure of the corridor. What individual property treatment can achieve is perimeter management sufficient to prevent interior infestation, maintained through a combination of exclusion and exterior bait station programs.
Roof rats use the street tree canopy to access residential rooflines on the blocks immediately surrounding the commercial core. Properties in the streets north and south of the Five Points intersection see consistent roof rat attic activity from late September through the winter as the canopy thins and rats move toward heated attic spaces.
Five Points' mature street tree network is the roof rat highway. Properties where tree limbs reach within 6 feet of fascia or soffit need both roofline sealing and limb clearance.
Properties backing onto Five Points' service alleys face Norway rat pressure from the alley drainage system directly. Foundation-level gaps on alley-facing walls are priority exclusion targets.
Ground-floor food service in Five Points creates continuous food availability at alley level. Norway rats from these pressure zones move into adjacent residential through any unsealed pathway.
Older residential construction in Five Points has the same deteriorated crawl space vent screening as Twickenham -- open Norway rat entry at multiple foundation points.
Five Points' commercial corridor continuously repressures residential properties through the alley drainage systems and sewer infrastructure. Treatment without perimeter exclusion and exterior pressure management produces temporary results. Ongoing exterior bait station programs and thorough exclusion are required for durable results in this corridor.
Yes. We provide commercial rodent programs with exterior bait station installation, health inspection documentation, and interior treatment during non-service hours for Five Points food service businesses.
Roof rat attic entry in Five Points peaks in September-November as the street tree canopy thins. But pressure is year-round -- the canopy simply provides a more obvious pathway in autumn. Roofline sealing is effective regardless of season.
Alley-facing foundation exclusion is priority-one for properties in this position. We seal all foundation-level gaps on the alley-facing wall, install exterior bait stations at the property line, and assess the full perimeter for additional pressure pathways.
Rodent control in Five Points for both residential and commercial properties. Free inspection, Mon-Sat 7AM-10PM.
📞 Call (844) 635-0403