Park City Library Earth Month Contest Turns Trash Into Community Art
The Park City Library is turning Earth Day into a gallery deadline, accepting trash sculptures at 1255 Park Ave. through April 22.

Trash sculptures are due at the Park City Library's front desk by April 22, Earth Day, when the library closes entries for its Earth Month recycled art contest.
The competition, based at 1255 Park Ave., asks participants to build three-dimensional artwork from trash, recyclables or repurposed materials. After dropping off a completed piece at the front desk and filling out an entry form, contributors will see their work displayed at the library through April 30. Organizers have encouraged early submission to allow time for installation, and prize details are posted on the library's event page alongside full submission rules.
The contest is the most hands-on element of a broader Earth Month push sweeping the Wasatch Back this April. Local nonprofits and arts organizations have staged sustainability workshops and family-friendly programming throughout the month, and the library's competition gives residents a direct, creative entry point into conversations about recycling and reuse. In a year marked by a difficult winter and mounting community concern about water supply and wildfire risk, local environmental programming carries added weight as the region turns its attention toward the coming fire season.

The library contest also lands inside a busy downtown cultural calendar. Gallery openings and a music-driven gallery stroll along Historic Main Street are running concurrently through early April, drawing the kind of foot traffic that sustains arts organizations and Main Street businesses alike. The recycled art exhibition, visible to anyone walking through the library's doors for any reason, connects that broader cultural energy to sustainability in a format free of cost and open to all ages.
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