CSUDH 19th Annual Earth Day Festival
- Campus Earth Day festival with sustainability workshops, student projects, food vendors, and family activities. - Happening this week on the Cal State Dominguez Hills campus with programming across the day; great for families and community groups. - Event listed in the week roundup: welikela.com
California State University, Dominguez Hills held its 19th Annual Earth Day Festival on Tuesday, April 21, with free public programming spread across campus walkways in Carson. (csudh.edu) The university’s Office of Sustainability listed the festival from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on the South Walkway, the Natural Sciences and Mathematics–Social and Behavioral Sciences Walkway, the East Walkway, and the outdoor Library roof deck. Toro Link and Eventbrite listings gave a slightly longer window, running to 3 p.m. (csudh.edu) (torolink.csudh.edu) (eventbrite.com) Event listings said the festival included interactive activities, giveaways, networking, and more than 30 organizations focused on environmental action on campus and across Los Angeles. Eventbrite said admission was free and that visitors did not need to register. (eventbrite.com) (laclimatereality.org) The event landed in local week-ahead calendars as Earth Day programming spread across Los Angeles on April 20-24, putting a university campus event alongside garden programs, upcycling workshops, and museum activities. We Like L.A. included the festival in its citywide roundup for this week. (welikela.com) At Dominguez Hills, the Earth Day program is built as a campus-community gathering, not a closed student event. The Earth Day organization on Toro Link says its mission is to bring together students, organizations, and off-campus community members working to protect and improve the environment. (torolink.csudh.edu) That format helps explain why the festival is pitched to families and neighborhood groups as well as students. A separate CSUDH Wellbeing Walks posting tied one of its April 21 journal circles directly to the Earth Day Festival and framed the event as a place to connect personal wellbeing with environmental sustainability. (torolink.csudh.edu) The 2026 festival also shows how Earth Day events at public universities now mix education with outreach. CSUDH’s sustainability office promoted the day alongside campus waste-diversion standings and other year-round engagement efforts, turning the festival into a showcase for ongoing projects rather than a one-off celebration. (csudh.edu) For visitors this week, the practical draw was simple: a free daytime event on the CSUDH campus with student-led sustainability programming, community exhibitors, and room for families to walk in and take part. (eventbrite.com)