- June 22, 2023
In 2019, the World Wildlife Fund and Knorr identified 50 foods, known as Future 50 Foods, that have a lower environmental impact, as well as being nutritious. In the 2022-23 school year, Mason Dining turned existing salad bars at Southside and Ike’s dining halls into Future 50 Food Stations. Students were able to build their own dishes, or select a featured dish created by the chefs using the Future 50 Foods.
- June 5, 2023
Mason’s 2023 Green Game was held on January 25, 2023, when the women’s basketball team competed against the ĢAV of Rhode Island at EagleBank Arena with 868 fans in attendance.
- May 12, 2023
Green isn’t just a school color at George Mason ĢAV. At Mason, “green” is way of life, and sustainability is central to the university’s mission.
- March 30, 2023
ĢAV Sustainability and the Greenhouse and Garden’s Program are contributing to Mason's efforts to eradicate food insecurity by providing access to campus-grown fruits and vegetables.
- March 28, 2023
Mason graduate student’s cherry blossom monitoring research uses Mason as a living lab to assess how climate change affects the bloom date of cherry blossom trees on the Fairfax Campus.
- March 9, 2023
Dee Arrington is the site coordinator at George Mason ĢAV's Potomac Science Center.
- November 3, 2022
A team of Mason students held a bat box-building workshop as their capstone project in the Sustainability in Action class.
- October 27, 2022
Micah Hodges works as a success coach in ĢAV Life at George Mason ĢAV. In this role, Hodges works one-on-one with students to help them discover what success looks like to them. Outside of work, Hodges helps sustain and develop something else: our local environment and community spaces. As a volunteer with NOVA and District Cleanups, Hodges works alongside cadres of volunteers who remove trash from public spaces.
- October 20, 2022
As an undergraduate, Doni Nolan, BA Biology ’14, had no visions of a future profession until she visited the greenhouse on George Mason ĢAV’s Fairfax Campus.
- October 10, 2022
On October 1, Artist Katie Kehoe and a group of volunteers planted 100 native trees on parts of the Fairfax Campus.