Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad
151 S Water St · Downtown Mobile
Cooper Riverside Park is Mobile's downtown waterfront and the splash pad gives you a free Mobile River breeze cool-down right on the boardwalk. Toddler-sized ground sprays sit on a small plaza near the cruise terminal, with big ship views that older kids love. No real shade — bring an umbrella. Free street parking on weekends, paid deck weekdays. Pair it with the Battleship USS Alabama across the bay or fried seafood at Wintzell's Oyster House blocks away. Gulf Coast humidity is intense June-September, and afternoon thunderstorms are essentially a daily event. Hurricane season (June-November) brings sudden closures; check City of Mobile parks updates before you head down.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Cooper Riverside Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Medal of Honor Park Splash
Medal of Honor Park is west Mobile's anchor splash spot and a much calmer scene than the downtown waterfront. Ground sprays sit beside a big playground and shaded pavilions, with walking trails and ballfields for older kids. Plenty of free parking and clean restrooms. Pair it with crawfish at Wintzell's or shrimp po'boys at Foosackly's a few miles east. Mobile summers are the definition of Gulf Coast brutal — mornings only from June through September, and afternoon thunderstorms are guaranteed. Hurricane season closures are real; Mobile Parks posts updates on social before tropical systems. Reliable neighborhood pick for west Mobile families avoiding downtown traffic.
Railroad Park Spray Plaza
Railroad Park is Birmingham's downtown living room and the spray plaza is the easiest free win in the city when summer humidity refuses to break. Ground jets pulse in choreographed bursts on a stone deck near the rail-watching berm, with toddlers on one end and bigger kids chasing the higher arcs. Free street parking on weekends, paid decks weekdays. Restrooms are clean and the grassy hill makes a great picnic perch. Pair it with barbecue at Saw's Soul Kitchen or a stroll to Regions Field for a Barons game. June-August thunderstorms shut things down on a dime, so check the radar before you load up. Open roughly Apr-Oct, dawn to dusk.
Vulcan Park Splash Pad
Vulcan Park's small splash feature is a sneaky cool-down spot tucked under Birmingham's iconic iron statue on Red Mountain. The toddler-sized ground sprays are right by the playground, and the views over the city skyline are honestly the reason you come — kids splash, parents take photos. Free parking on the lower lot, paid for the museum tower. Restrooms in the visitor center are clean and well-shaded. Pair it with Niki's West for meat-and-three classics on the way home. Alabama summers are no joke; mornings before 11am are the only humane window most weeks. Severe-weather closures are common in spring tornado season.
Veterans Park Splash Hoover
Veterans Park in Hoover is the south Birmingham suburbs' go-to splash setup — clean, big, and free. Toddler ground jets sit beside a separate big-kid zone with arching streams, plus a substantial playground, walking trails, and ballfields if older siblings want to roam. Plenty of free parking and well-kept restrooms. Pair it with Steel City Pops on the way home or Newk's Eatery a mile south. Hoover summers stay 90+°F with thick humidity from June through September, so morning visits are smart. Watch for severe-weather closures during Alabama's spring storm season — the city posts updates on Hoover Parks & Rec social. Reliable suburban backup for a sweaty afternoon.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Big Spring Park Splash Area
Big Spring Park sits right in the middle of downtown Huntsville, and the interactive jets along the canal are a free Rocket City classic. Kids splash with the iconic spring-fed lagoon and koi pond as backdrop, with the U.S. Space & Rocket Center museums all within a short drive when little ones tire of the spray. Limited shade on the deck itself but plenty of oaks around the lawn. Free street parking gets tight on event weekends — try the city deck on Spragins. Pair with lunch at Cotton Row or popsicles at Honest Coffee. North Alabama summers run humid and stormy; afternoon T-storms shut things down regularly June-August.
Montgomery Riverwalk Splash
Montgomery Riverwalk's downtown splash feature is a free interactive jets plaza on the Alabama River, with the Renaissance Hotel and Riverwalk Stadium framing it. Best at golden hour when the deck cools and the river breeze kicks in. No shade on the plaza itself, so bring water shoes — the brick gets hot by noon. Free parking under the Coliseum, restrooms in the visitor center. Pair it with a Biscuits baseball game next door or Chris's Hot Dogs downtown for a Montgomery classic lunch. Central Alabama summers run 95°F with thick humidity June-September; afternoon storm closures are routine. The capital's prettiest free family hour.
Railroad Park Spray Plaza
Railroad Park is Birmingham's downtown living room and the spray plaza is the easiest free win in the city when summer humidity refuses to break. Ground jets pulse in choreographed bursts on a stone deck near the rail-watching berm, with toddlers on one end and bigger kids chasing the higher arcs. Free street parking on weekends, paid decks weekdays. Restrooms are clean and the grassy hill makes a great picnic perch. Pair it with barbecue at Saw's Soul Kitchen or a stroll to Regions Field for a Barons game. June-August thunderstorms shut things down on a dime, so check the radar before you load up. Open roughly Apr-Oct, dawn to dusk.
Vulcan Park Splash Pad
Vulcan Park's small splash feature is a sneaky cool-down spot tucked under Birmingham's iconic iron statue on Red Mountain. The toddler-sized ground sprays are right by the playground, and the views over the city skyline are honestly the reason you come — kids splash, parents take photos. Free parking on the lower lot, paid for the museum tower. Restrooms in the visitor center are clean and well-shaded. Pair it with Niki's West for meat-and-three classics on the way home. Alabama summers are no joke; mornings before 11am are the only humane window most weeks. Severe-weather closures are common in spring tornado season.