The Innerbelt is a 4-mile, partially decommissioned highway that cuts through the center of Akron, Ohio. Its construction, which lasted from 1970 to 1985, displaced over 700 homes and 100 businesses, erased the city’s former Black main street along Wooster Avenue, severed community ties, and inflicted lasting harm particularly to the city’s Black community. The highway, along with Urban Renewal and “redlining,” is a legacy of discriminatory 20th-century urban development practices – a legacy that the Innerbelt Master Plan aims to address.