Fairmont Park Splash Pad
1040 E Sugarmont Dr · Sugar House
Fairmont Park is the Sugar House neighborhood's go-to — skate park, dog park, splash play, and the kind of casual neighborhood feel that makes Sugar House Sugar House. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, with the playground refreshed recently. Free parking, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings. Parent gotcha: Sugar House sits in the Salt Lake Valley bowl that traps smoke from regional fires — late summer Wasatch wildfire smoke pushes AQI past 150 most years. Utah's high-altitude UV at 4,200+ feet burns kids fast even when the air feels cool. Skip on inversion days. Pair with a Liberty Heights Fresh sandwich or Sugar House Coffee stop after for the full neighborhood day. SLC parent staple.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Fairmont Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Fairmont Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Fairmont Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Fairmont Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Fairmont Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Liberty Park Splash Pad
Liberty Park is Salt Lake's biggest urban park — Tracy Aviary, Seven Canyons Fountain, the Rotary playground splash zone, and the running loop all on one campus. Families turn it into a full half-day with multiple stops. The Seven Canyons Fountain is the showpiece — interactive water features representing Utah's seven canyons, with kids running between them. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings before noon. Parent gotcha: SLC at 4,200 feet still has serious UV — sunburn happens fast, sunscreen religiously. Late summer wildfire smoke from Utah, Idaho, and Nevada fires regularly pushes the Wasatch Front AQI past 150; SLC inversions can trap smoke for days. Check Utah DEQ air quality before driving. Pair with Tracy Aviary as a smoke-day Plan B.
Rotary Glen Park Splash Pad
Rotary Glen Park is east Salt Lake City's quiet hillside park, tucked into the foothills near Hogle Zoo and This Is The Place Heritage Park, and the splash zone is the smart parent's secret weapon for cooling kids off after a hot zoo morning. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, mature shade trees, picnic shelters, real restrooms, free parking. Best on weekday mornings before the zoo crowds arrive. Parent gotcha: Salt Lake at 4,300 feet plus the foothill exposure delivers intense summer UV — sunscreen the kids before they run. Late summer Wasatch and California wildfire smoke regularly drops the Salt Lake Valley AQI to unhealthy and shuts outdoor play on short notice; check Utah DEQ alerts. Afternoon thunderstorms over the Wasatch close the pad at lightning. Pair with the zoo morning and a splash afternoon.
Sugar House Park Splash Pad
Sugar House Park is Salt Lake's iconic 110-acre central park — pond, sledding hill in winter, sweeping mountain views to the Wasatch, and a small splash feature near the playground. The pad is modest but the surrounding lawn and pond are the real draws. Free parking around the perimeter, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings before noon. Parent gotcha: the open lawn means full-sun UV exposure at 4,200 feet — Utah burns hit hard, sunscreen and hats non-negotiable. Late summer wildfire smoke from Utah and Idaho fires settles into the Salt Lake Valley basin via inversion; AQI past 150 is routine in August-September. Skip on smoke days. Pair with a Sweet Sandy ice cream walk after for the full SLC summer Sunday.
Station Park Splash Pad
Station Park in Farmington is the rare outdoor shopping center where the choreographed dancing fountain is the actual destination — kids run freely through the show every 30 minutes through summer, parents sit at restaurant patios with kids in view. The fountain shows happen year-round but summer is when kids get drenched. Free parking is huge, restrooms in every anchor store. Best on weekday afternoons before evening dinner crowds. Parent gotcha: the fountain is plaza-style with no zero-depth design — water shoes required, and the brick gets hot. Davis County summer UV at 4,300 feet still burns. Late summer wildfire smoke from Northern Utah and Idaho fires regularly pushes Wasatch AQI past 150. Bring towels. Pair with The Cheesecake Factory or Cafe Rio for the full Station Park afternoon.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Marshall White Center Splash
Marshall White Center is Ogden's downtown community-center complex and the splash pad sits in a well-laid-out family zone with the rec center pool, a playground, and picnic tables — the kind of one-stop-shop afternoon Ogden does well. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, real restrooms inside the rec center, free parking. Best on weekday mornings before the day-camp groups arrive. Parent gotcha: Ogden sits at 4,300 feet at the base of the Wasatch and summer UV is intense even on cool days — sunscreen the kids before they run. Late summer wildfire smoke from California, Idaho, and Utah fires regularly pushes Weber County AQI past unhealthy and shuts outdoor play on short notice; check Utah DEQ alerts. Afternoon thunderstorms over the Wasatch in July close the pad at lightning. Pair with a Slackwater pizza on Historic 25th Street after.
Mt. Timpanogos Park Splash
Mt. Timpanogos Park is Orem's well-loved neighborhood park with a splash zone, a playground, picnic shelters, and the kind of clean suburban polish that makes Utah County family parks consistently good. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best on weekday mornings before the after-camp crowd arrives. Parent gotcha: Orem at 4,800 feet in the Utah Valley delivers intense summer UV even on cool days — sunscreen the kids before they run. Late summer wildfire smoke from California, Idaho, and regional Utah fires regularly drops Utah County AQI to unhealthy and shuts outdoor play on short notice; check Utah DEQ. Afternoon thunderstorms can build fast over Mt. Timpanogos in July and August; the pad closes at lightning. Pair with a Sammy's Cafe shake after for the full Provo-Orem family afternoon.
Pioneer Park Splash Pad
Pioneer Park is Provo's small-but-loved downtown family park — a historic park with mature shade trees, a playground, picnic tables, and a splash zone that gets the regulars-only weekday crowd. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best in the late morning before the after-camp crowd shows up. Parent gotcha: Provo at 4,500 feet in the Utah Valley delivers intense summer UV — sunscreen kids before they run, hats are smart. Late summer wildfire smoke from California, Idaho, and regional Utah fires regularly pushes Utah County AQI to unhealthy levels and shuts outdoor play; check Utah DEQ alerts before driving. Afternoon thunderstorms can roll in fast off the Wasatch in July; the pad closes at lightning. Pair with a Communal lunch on Center Street after — Provo's underrated downtown food scene.
Flat Iron Mesa Park Splash
Flat Iron Mesa Park in Sandy is the suburban twofer — splash pad and skate park on the same campus, so older siblings can roll while toddlers and early grade-schoolers run the ground sprays. The community feel is neighborhood-family, not destination-tourist. Free parking, restrooms clean, shaded picnic tables along the edge. Best on weekday mornings. Parent gotcha: south Salt Lake Valley sits where wildfire smoke from the Wasatch and Uintas fires settles via afternoon inversion — AQI past 150 in late summer is common. Utah UV at 4,500 feet burns kids fast on the exposed pad. Skip on smoke days. Pair with Pirate Island Pizza for the post-splash tradition that turns it into a full Sandy summer afternoon. Real south-valley parent staple.