Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain
194 S Market St · Downtown San Jose
Plaza de Cesar Chavez is downtown San Jose's living room and the 27-jet interactive fountain at its center is a kid magnet on hot afternoons. The jets shoot in patterns and kids learn to dodge the bigger blasts. There's almost no shade on the plaza itself, so morning or evening visits are dramatically more pleasant. Paid garage parking nearby; metered street parking is hard on weekdays. Clean restrooms in the surrounding hotels and the Tech Museum lobby. Walk to San Pedro Square Market for lunch. Downtown SJ at its best.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🧑Big-kid zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
- 💧Interactive jets
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain free?
Yes — Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain good for toddlers?
Yes — Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Plaza de Cesar Chavez Fountain open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Cataldi Park Splash Pad
Cataldi Park is Berryessa's reliable family stop — a colorful splash pad, a big modern playground, ballfields, and a community center all in one easy neighborhood spot. The water features are sized for younger kids with gentle ground sprays; older kids will rotate to the playground's climbing structures and slides. Free parking is generous, and basic seasonal restrooms are available. Best on weekday mornings; the after-school crowd hits at 3pm. Pack snacks and lunch; nothing close enough to walk to but plenty of options on Berryessa Road if you drive. Locally loved by Berryessa families and rarely crowded enough to feel hectic. A real San Jose neighborhood park experience, free.
Discovery Meadow Splash Pad
Discovery Meadow is the lawn and splash zone right next to the Children's Discovery Museum, and the natural pairing is the move — splash pad first, museum second when the kids are tired and ready for AC. The water features include creek-style play that flows under little bridges and cobble paths, perfect for unstructured imaginative play. Paid lot parking at the museum or Almaden Boulevard meters. Clean restrooms in the museum lobby (with admission or just ask). Best on weekday mornings. Pair with lunch at one of the downtown SJ spots. San Jose's best family combo.
Emma Prusch Farm Park Splash Pad
Emma Prusch Farm Park is San Jose's working farm in the city — 47 acres with chickens, goats, fruit orchards, and a community garden that's free to walk. The seasonal water play is modest but pairs perfectly with the farm-day vibe. Big shade trees throughout. Free parking is generous, restrooms in the visitor center. Best in the morning when the animals are most active and the heat is bearable. Pack a picnic. Walk the orchard loop after. A genuinely unique San Jose family experience that costs nothing.
Roosevelt Park Splash Pad
Roosevelt Park is East San Jose's working community park — Roosevelt Community Center, swimming pool, ball fields, and a seasonal spray feature that locals know is the budget-friendly cool-off when South Bay summer heat sets in. Free parking, clean restrooms, and the community center hosts everything from story times to teen programs. Spray zone is modest, sized for toddlers through grade-schoolers with ground sprays. Best on weekday mornings before camp groups arrive. Parent gotcha: California drought rules and San Jose Water restrictions can trim daily hours, sometimes cutting splash play entirely during severe years — check SJ Parks before driving. Smoke from NorCal fires can also shut outdoor play. Pair with a stroll to one of the East Santa Clara Vietnamese pho spots or a banh mi run for an after-splash lunch.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Grand Park Splash Pad
Grand Park's hot-pink splash pad is one of the most photographed spots in downtown LA — programmable jets shoot in patterns against a backdrop of City Hall and the music center. Kids treat it like a giant urban sprinkler and parents work the camera angles. There's almost no shade on the pad itself, so morning visits beat midday. Paid garage parking under the Music Center; metered street parking is rough. Clean restrooms in the park's pavilions. Best on weekday mornings. Walk to Grand Central Market for lunch. DTLA at its most kid-friendly.
Waterfront Park Splash Pad
Waterfront Park is San Diego's downtown crown — an 830-foot interactive fountain that runs the length of the County Administration Building's front lawn with dozens of jets that kids run through in giggling laps. There's almost no shade on the fountain itself, so morning visits before 11am are dramatically more pleasant. The lawn beyond the fountain is huge and great for picnics. Paid garage parking nearby; metered street parking is harder. Clean restrooms in the County Admin building. Walk to Little Italy for lunch. San Diego's most photogenic free fountain.
Yerba Buena Gardens Children's Garden
Yerba Buena Gardens' children's center is downtown San Francisco's family secret — a carousel, a children's creativity museum, an ice rink, and seasonal water play features all in one beautifully landscaped block. The water features here are gentler and seasonal, more spray-mist than full splash pad, but the surrounding gardens are stunning. Paid garage parking under the gardens. Restrooms in the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Best on weekday mornings or right after school lets out. Walk to the SFMOMA, Moscone Center, or grab lunch at one of the SoMa spots. Urban SF at its kid-friendly best.
Discovery Meadow Splash Pad
Discovery Meadow is the lawn and splash zone right next to the Children's Discovery Museum, and the natural pairing is the move — splash pad first, museum second when the kids are tired and ready for AC. The water features include creek-style play that flows under little bridges and cobble paths, perfect for unstructured imaginative play. Paid lot parking at the museum or Almaden Boulevard meters. Clean restrooms in the museum lobby (with admission or just ask). Best on weekday mornings. Pair with lunch at one of the downtown SJ spots. San Jose's best family combo.