
To understand London, simply walking its streets is not enough; one must also look at the river that serves as the city’s lifeblood, its flow, and the stories accumulated along its banks. We open our calendars and note the dates for the Totally Thames Festival 2026, organized by the Thames Festival Trust, which will transform London into a giant open-air stage throughout the month of September. Celebrating London’s greatest natural asset, the River Thames, with art, ecological awareness, and community energy, this month-long marathon offers a unique urban manifesto for anyone wishing to explore the river’s past, present, and future.
Originally organized between 1997 and 2013 as a mere two-day event on the banks of the South Bank, the festival broke out of its shell in 2014, transforming into a massive cultural season spanning the entire month of September. Today, stretching across a 42-mile stretch of the riverfront, Totally Thames is a boundless arena of creativity—ranging from pop-up performances and river clean-up events to floating installations and interactive workshops. Having brought together over 40,000 physical and 90,000 digital visitors last year, the festival is preparing to project the themes of belonging and sustainability with a much louder voice through the fluid language of water in September 2026.
The intellectual and artistic backbone of the program is formed by several deep-rooted sub-themes that elevate the festival from a temporary entertainment platform into a profound social movement:
As highlighted by Arts Council England, Totally Thames stands as one of the most successful examples of a city transforming its own natural resources into artistic instruments. The festival team is currently preparing to launch the 2026 program and open its doors to volunteers. Removing art from the sterile, white walls of galleries and surrendering it to the mercy of water, tides, and mud completely shatters conventional assumptions regarding modern city planning and urban art.






