Bring your business, your art, your hands, your support, or your very good idea.
Open the door. Light up the street.
For Inglewood businesses, venues, patios, shops, restaurants, cafés, galleries, studios, community groups, organizations, and neighbours who want to be part of Pride Weekend.
Partners can plug in through a patio moment, window display, special offer, hosted artist, vendor table, community activation, dog-friendly idea, family-friendly activity, venue event, in-kind support, poster distribution, or a visible welcome that lets people know Pride is not just passing through.
You do not need to build the whole weekend. Bring your corner of it.
Bring your heart and comfortable shoes.
Volunteers help make the weekend feel welcoming, visible, cared for, and easy to move through.
Volunteer roles may include wayfinding, guest support, artist and vendor support, community booth support, accessibility support, setup, teardown, information sharing, and helping people find what they need while keeping the street energy moving.
Some roles are public-facing.
Some are behind the scenes.
All of them help Pride show up properly.
The street needs sound, story, sparkle, and skill.
Back to the Streets is making room for queer and trans performers, drag artists, musicians, DJs, dancers, storytellers, hosts, facilitators, vendors, makers, and creative people who know how to turn public space into something people remember.
Programming may include all-ages performance, music, drag, DJs, dance, markets, storytelling, family-friendly activities, partner venue events, 18+ nightlife, and community-rooted moments across the weekend.
Back the people. Build the street.
Sponsors help make the visible parts possible: artists, stages, sound, staffing, signage, access supports, volunteers, washrooms, wayfinding, promotion, documentation, market infrastructure, family programming, and the practical pieces that let people gather with more ease.
Support can be financial or in-kind. Both matter.
Funding, printing, food, space, equipment, supplies, staff time, media support, accessibility support, prizes, hospitality, and neighbourhood resources can all help build the weekend.
Support the street-level Pride infrastructure that keeps community visible.