Brampton Grow Green Festival 2025
On Saturday, May 31, over 900 visitors and 100+ partners and volunteers came together for Brampton’s first-ever Grow Green Festival held at Paul Palleschi Recreation Centre and Loafer’s Lake. This vibrant, drop-in style community celebration was the City’s fourth annual environmental celebration, now aligning with World Environment Day.
Opening remarks by Councillor Palleschi, Councillor Brar, and Minister McGregor, with attendance from Councillor Vicente, set the tone for an afternoon of gratitude, environmental pride, and community connection. We were honoured to be joined by Elder Winterhawk, member of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, together with Cidalia of Four Colours Drum Circle.
Despite periods of extreme weather, the Grow Green Festival buzzed with creativity, movement, and community spirit while serving as joyful tribute Brampton’s environmental community, leadership and nature. The festival brought together residents, partners, artists, storytellers, and city teams in an immersive afternoon of fun, learning, and connection making it a historic success.
Thanks to Brampton Transit’s shuttle service that helped divert 40 cars and Region of Peel’s recycling and organics bins that helped reduce landfill waste.
A Celebration of Nature and Community
This year’s festival theme was ‘Wetlands’ to spotlight these unique natural habitats and mark the official opening of the restored Loafer’s Lake Wetland. This project was a transformative ecological project a part of the Etobicoke Creek Wetlands Enhancement Project funded in part through the Government of Ontario’s Wetlands Conservation Partner Program. A beautiful original park sign designed by indigenous artist Cody Houle was unveiled. Special thank you to Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) for leading the restoration work, Heart Lake Turtle Troopers for helping to protect wildlife along the way, and Ducks Unlimited Canada for their support of this project.
Visitors explored the newly revitalized wetland through self-guided walks and joined guided tours led by the TRCA, learning about local biodiversity, wetland functions, and the city's efforts to restore natural habitats.
Exhibitor Showcase that Brought Sustainability to Life
Over 35 booths hosted by 25 partner organizations and 10 City teams offered creative, educational, and hands-on activities for all ages. These included indigenous teachings, songs, and drumming, turtle trivia, eco-jeopardy, urban heat mapping, bike tune-ups, clothing repair demos, mosaic-making using recycled tiles, seed planting, invasive species education, energy-saving and flood prevention tips, and casual career networking opportunities for youth and emerging professional.
Festival fun also included special live birds-of-prey (hawks and owls) viewing by Wild Ontario, henna designs and face painting, a selfie photo booth, and free food and drinks, including halal, vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free options. Special celebratory cookies were provided by Occassions Bakery and Treats Parlour.
See full list of our incredible exhibitors below.
We thank the Brampton community for your continued support and for championing Brampton’s environmental leadership. With your commitment, we are shaping a greener, healthier, and more connected city.