Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake
450 W Southlake Blvd · Southlake Town Square
Bicentennial Park is the heart of Southlake's family scene and the splash pad lives up to the suburb's reputation for nice everything — wide deck, ground sprays for toddlers, arching jets for older kids, and a destination playground with shade sails. Free parking, spotless restrooms, pavilions are first-come free. Parent gotcha: Southlake follows North Texas drought-stage rules and Stage 2 has trimmed pad hours — check the city site. The lot fills by 11am on July weekends. Best on weekday mornings. Walk to Southlake Town Square after for ice cream and a stroll. Polished Tarrant-county suburban summer.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🧑Big-kid zone
- 🌳Shade
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake free?
Yes — Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake good for toddlers?
Yes — Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Bicentennial Park Splash Southlake open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Allen Station Park Splash Pad
Allen Station Park is North Texas suburban splash done right — wide interactive pad with arching jets and ground sprays sized for both toddlers and grade-schoolers, all on a free-parking community park with a destination playground and a skate park nearby. Restrooms are clean and the pavilions are first-come free. Best on weekday mornings; Allen families pack the deck by noon on weekends. Parent gotcha: the Texas sun is brutal on the deck by 11am — water shoes are not optional, and reapply sunscreen every hour. Pack a cooler and use the pavilion. Suburban Allen's go-to for the 105-degree day.
Celebration Park Allen Splash
Celebration Park lives up to its name — the largest splash pad in Allen, with multi-zone interactive features that mean toddlers, grade-schoolers, and tweens all find something. There are arching jets, ground sprays, and dump buckets, plus the destination playground next door has shaded equipment which on a 100-degree day is the difference between fun and meltdown. Free parking and clean restrooms. Best at opening when the deck is still cool. Parent gotcha: this place is enormous, so set a meet-up spot before you let big kids loose. Pack lunch for the pavilions. Allen's flagship.
Don Rodenbaugh Natatorium Splash
Don Rodenbaugh Natatorium's splash zone is the climate-controlled secret weapon of North Texas summer — when the outdoor 105-degree heat is too much, you can pivot to the indoor splash features for a small fee. Outdoor pad has interactive jets and ground sprays, indoor side has zero-depth wading and slides. Free parking, locker rooms, and a snack bar. Best mid-afternoon when the outdoor heat is at its worst and you can move inside. Parent gotcha: the small fee adds up for big families — the season pass pays for itself by visit five. Allen's hot-day insurance policy.
Thompson Park Splash Amarillo
Thompson Park is Amarillo's biggest park and the splash pad is a Panhandle summer essential — when the wind kicks up dust and the heat tops 100, you bring the kids here. Interactive jets and ground sprays on a wide zero-depth deck, with a destination playground and a kiddie zoo all on the same campus. Free parking is huge but afternoon shade is scarce — the pavilions go first-come fast. Best in the morning before the wind picks up. Parent gotcha: the dust on Panhandle summer days gets in everything; pack extra towels. Amarillo's summer survival kit.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Randol Mill Park Splash
Randol Mill Park is the closest splash pad to Globe Life Field, which makes it a Rangers-game-day cool-down zone for parents who don't want to pay stadium prices for water. The pad has interactive jets, ground sprays, and a wide deck with both toddler and big-kid zones. Free parking is abundant on non-game days, brutal on game days — plan accordingly. Restrooms are clean, the playground is a destination. Best on weekday mornings to dodge both heat and game-day crowds. Parent gotcha: deck temperature reaches 130-plus by 2pm; water shoes are mandatory. Rangers fan family essential.
Bartholomew District Park Splash
Bartholomew is northeast Austin's reliable family park — splash pad, free pool, playground, and trails all in one easy stop. The water features are functional rather than fancy, but the deal is unbeatable: free everything. Pool hours are limited (check Austin Parks Rec calendar) but the splash pad runs through the long Austin summer. Free parking is generous; restrooms are basic and seasonal. Best on weekday mornings; after-camp crowds arrive around 3pm. Pack lunch — closest food is a drive away. Locally loved, rarely on tourist lists. A real Austin neighborhood gem.
Bob Woodruff Park Splash
Bob Woodruff Park is Plano's biggest park and the splash pad anchors a family campus that includes a destination playground, lakeside trails, fishing piers, and pavilions. Ground sprays for toddlers, arching jets for older kids. Free parking is plentiful but fills by 11am summer weekends. Restrooms are clean. Parent gotcha: Plano enforces Collin County drought-stage rules and Stage 2 has cut pad hours to mornings — check the city site. The deck has thin shade so layer the sunscreen. Best on weekday mornings. Pack a picnic and walk the lake loop after. Quintessential Plano summer.
Cedar Park Center Splash
Cedar Park Center's splash plaza is the suburban Austin cool-down combo — paired with the indoor arena and the surrounding shops, it's the rare splash spot where parents can pivot to AC, food, or shopping in 60 seconds when the kids tap out. The pad has interactive jets and ground sprays. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms are clean. Best on weekday mornings before the suburban afternoon rush. Parent gotcha: the surrounding plaza is hot concrete with little shade — bring a pop-up canopy or claim a tree spot fast. Suburban Austin's flexible afternoon.