Lock 3 Park Splash Pad
200 S Main St · Downtown Akron
Lock 3 is downtown Akron's outdoor stage and gathering plaza, and in summer the interactive jets transform it into an impromptu kids' splash zone between concerts and festivals. The plaza is concrete and bright, so morning visits before 11am are dramatically cooler. Surrounding shaded benches help. Free street parking around the lot fills during events; the High Street garage is your backup. Restrooms in the visitor center. Check the Lock 3 calendar before you go — half the magic is catching a free concert or movie on the same trip. Walk to Luigi's for pizza after. Downtown Akron at its best.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🌳Shade
- 🚻Restrooms
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
- 💧Interactive jets
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Lock 3 Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Lock 3 Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Lock 3 Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Lock 3 Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Lock 3 Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Firestone Park Splash Pad
Firestone Park is the kind of tree-lined Akron neighborhood splash spot that feels untouched since the 1950s in the best way. Ground sprays, a roomy adjacent playground, and a community pool right next door make this a reliable three-hour stop. Free parking is generous and street parking is also fine. Restrooms are basic and seasonal. Best on weekday mornings — after-school crowds roll in around 3:30. Pack a lunch; there's nothing close enough to walk to. Locally loved, never crowded enough to feel hectic. A solid south Akron staple.
Summit Lake Splash Pad
Summit Lake Park is part of Akron's lakefront revival and the new splash pad is the family draw. Ground sprays sit beside a refreshed playground and a nature center with kid programming. The lake itself is too polluted to swim but beautiful to walk around. Free parking, clean modern restrooms, and the trail loop is stroller-friendly. Best in the morning before the heat reflects off the open lakefront — there's not much shade on the pad itself. Akron's investment in this neighborhood shows. A reliable, quieter alternative to downtown's Lock 3.
Huntington Beach Splash
Huntington Beach is the rare splash pad where you can run from the spray jets straight onto a Lake Erie beach in twenty steps. Cleveland Metroparks runs a tidy zero-depth pad with ground sprays sized for toddlers, a destination playground next door, and the lake itself for big-kid swims. Restrooms are clean and parking is free, but the lots fill fast on July weekends — show up before 11am or push to a weekday. Late afternoon is gold: the lake breeze cools the pad and you get sunset over the water. Parent gotcha: the beach drop-off is steeper than it looks; toddlers need a hand. Bring sand toys and a real towel. Cleveland's best beach-and-spray combo.
Boardman Park Splash
Boardman Park is the Mahoning Valley's flagship and the splash pad shows the investment — wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets that arc high for grade-schoolers, and a separate toddler zone of low ground sprays. The destination playground next door means you can stretch a visit into a full afternoon. Free parking is plentiful and restrooms are well-maintained. Best on weekday mornings before camp groups arrive after 1pm. Parent gotcha: the deck heats up by midday, so wear water shoes for any kid sensitive to hot concrete. Pack a picnic — pavilions ring the lawn and most are first-come free. Pure Northeast Ohio summer.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Bicentennial Park Splash Pad
Bicentennial Park sits at the foot of the Scioto Mile and is the splash pad most Columbus parents picture when they say "downtown water." Programmable jets shoot in shifting patterns across a wide zero-depth plaza, so it works for cautious toddlers on the edges and full-send big kids who plant themselves on the geysers. The skyline backdrop makes for great phone photos. Free parking is rough on weekends — use the Rich Street garage or arrive before 10am. Restrooms in the visitor pavilion are clean. Pair with a Scioto Mile fountain run and lunch at Milestone 229 next door. Downtown Columbus at its most kid-friendly.
Public Square Fountain
Public Square's redesign turned downtown Cleveland into a real urban gathering spot, and the synchronized fountain is the kid magnet at its center. Programmable jets shoot in shifting patterns and kids spend full afternoons trying to predict the next big blast. The plaza is concrete and largely unshaded, so morning or evening visits beat midday. Tower City and the surrounding garages handle parking; you'll pay. Restrooms inside Tower City. Pair with a walk to the West Side Market or lunch at Heinen's downtown. Cleveland's living room, water park edition.
RiverScape MetroPark Fountain
RiverScape's Five Rivers Fountain is one of Ohio's largest urban water features, with arcing jets shooting from five granite columns that represent the rivers feeding the Great Miami. Kids treat it as a giant interactive sprinkler, dodging in and out of the changing patterns while parents watch from the shaded amphitheater seats. The plaza is fully accessible and stroller-friendly, restrooms are clean, and there's free parking in the adjacent garage. Best in the late morning or early evening when the downtown lunch crowd has cleared. Pair with a riverwalk stroll or a stop at the Dayton Dragons stadium next door. Bring a towel — kids leave drenched.
Glass City Metropark Splash Pad
Glass City Metropark is Toledo's newest crown jewel and the splash pad shows it — clean, modern, and built right on the Maumee River so you're cooling off with a skyline view. Multi-zone jets keep toddlers entertained on the gentle ground sprays while bigger kids chase the high arching streams. The adjacent playground is shaded and the event lawn means food trucks and live music on summer weekends. Parking is free and abundant, restrooms are well-maintained, and the riverwalk extends right to downtown if you want to push the stroller after. Go early on summer weekends — by 1pm the lot fills. Toledo's new front porch.