Domino Park Splash Pad
300 Kent Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11249 · Williamsburg
Williamsburg parents, Domino Park's splash pad is engineered for that perfect 90-minute East River afternoon. The sugarcane-shaped sprays nod to the old Domino Sugar Refinery towering above, and the zero-depth design means even one-year-olds can crawl through. Tacocina is steps away for parent margaritas (or kid quesadillas), the elevated walk gives you Manhattan skyline drama, and the playground fills the gap when little ones need a break. Splash pad runs the NYC Parks summer schedule, late June to Labor Day, with a 70F minimum to turn on. Stroller-easy, restrooms in the park, and the L to Bedford or Williamsburg Bridge walk both work.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🧑Big-kid zone
- 🌳Shade
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
- 💧Interactive jets
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Domino Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Domino Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Domino Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Domino Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Domino Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Brooklyn Bridge Park Pier 6 Water Lab
Pier 6's Water Lab is the Brooklyn parent power move and the city's best interactive water playground. Kids redirect water through pumps, dams, archimedes screws, and sprays while you sit in the shade with skyline views. It is right next to Slide Mountain (those steep concrete slides everyone Instagrams) and Swing Valley, so you can easily burn a full day. The Lab runs on the NYC Parks summer schedule, opening in late June and shutting off after Labor Day, with closures below 70F. Restrooms are clean, food trucks line up on Pier 6, and the ferry from Wall Street drops you a ten-minute walk away. Stroller-friendly and fully accessible.
Imagination Playground Spray Brooklyn
Prospect Park's Imagination Playground is the storybook-themed gem off the Lincoln Road entrance — bronze spray sculptures shaped like fairy-tale figures, a sprinkler area, and a big playground all in one shaded grove. The water features are gentler than a true splash pad but the bronze sculptures are charming and very Brooklyn. No parking; take the Q to Parkside or the B/Q to Prospect Park. Clean restrooms in the surrounding park buildings. Best on weekday mornings. Walk to the Lefferts Historic House or Prospect Park Zoo. Brooklyn family afternoon, perfected.
Marsha P Johnson State Park Splash
Williamsburg locals know Marsha P. Johnson State Park (the renamed East River State Park) as the spot with skyline views and Smorgasburg on Saturdays. In summer the small spray feature near the playground turns into a quick cool-down for toddlers, perfect when you have done a full Williamsburg morning and need to break the meltdown. NY State Parks runs the spray on a similar summer schedule to NYC Parks, late June to Labor Day, with weather minimums. Restrooms are in the park, no parking (take the L to Bedford or Citi Bike), and grab tacos at Domino Park or coffee at a Kent Avenue spot afterward. Bring a towel, no real shade.
McCarren Park Spray Showers
McCarren is the Greenpoint-Williamsburg parent commons. The spray showers sit next to the playground in the southwest corner, perfect for that 4pm meltdown rescue when you have been at the farmers market or grabbing bagels. Standard NYC Parks summer schedule applies, late June to Labor Day, 70F minimum to turn on, off by Labor Day no matter the heat. Soft-fall surface, fenced playground, restrooms by the running track. The G to Nassau or the L to Lorimer both work, and Greenpoint Avenue offers post-splash pierogi or pastries. Pro tip: weekday mornings are mellow, weekend afternoons get packed.
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Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Brooklyn Bridge Park Pier 6 Water Lab
Pier 6's Water Lab is the Brooklyn parent power move and the city's best interactive water playground. Kids redirect water through pumps, dams, archimedes screws, and sprays while you sit in the shade with skyline views. It is right next to Slide Mountain (those steep concrete slides everyone Instagrams) and Swing Valley, so you can easily burn a full day. The Lab runs on the NYC Parks summer schedule, opening in late June and shutting off after Labor Day, with closures below 70F. Restrooms are clean, food trucks line up on Pier 6, and the ferry from Wall Street drops you a ten-minute walk away. Stroller-friendly and fully accessible.
Pier 25 Splash Pad
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Highland Park Spray Park
Highland Park is Rochester's lilac-festival park and the spray park near the bowl amphitheater is a quietly great cooldown after a botanical garden walk. Ground jets and a couple of taller features sit on a fenced rubber-mat deck, with mature shade trees nearby. Free parking on Reservoir Ave; clean restrooms at the conservatory. Bigger kids like the playground next door. Lake-effect breezes off Ontario mean Rochester evenings cool fast — golden hour here is gorgeous. Pair with a visit to Lamberton Conservatory or a stop at the Public Market on a Saturday morning. Open roughly late May through early September, daytime hours.
Hudson River Park Pier 51 Water Play
Pier 51 is the Hudson River Park gem West Village families plan their summers around. A nautical-themed water playground with hand pumps kids work themselves, gentle sprays, channels of flowing water, and a real dump bucket that soaks anyone underneath when it tips. Sail-style canopies provide actual shade — rare and welcome in NYC summer. No parking; take the 1 train to Christopher Street and walk. Clean restrooms in the pier pavilion. Best on weekday mornings; weekends draw stroller battalions. Walk to Joe's Pizza or the Highline after. NYC family magic.