Soldiers Field Splash
244 Soldiers Field Dr SW · Soldiers Field / South Rochester
Soldiers Field is Rochester's classic park and the splash feature is a welcome cool-down after a Mayo-area errand morning. The pad is modest with gentle ground sprays for toddlers, set inside a sprawling park with the public pool, golf course, and shaded picnic groves. Free parking is plentiful and rarely full. Best on weekday mornings before the city's daycare groups arrive. Parent gotcha: the splash feature is small and not a destination by itself — pair it with a stop at the Discovery Square play area downtown for a full afternoon. Pack lunch for the pavilions. Rochester's reliable family stop between Mayo appointments.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Soldiers Field Splash free?
Yes — Soldiers Field Splash is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Soldiers Field Splash good for toddlers?
Yes — Soldiers Field Splash has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Soldiers Field Splash open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Bayfront Festival Splash
Bayfront Festival Park is Duluth's Lake Superior front porch and the splash play offers the rare combo of harbor views and water cool-down within a single afternoon. The pad is small but well-kept with gentle ground sprays sized for toddlers, the Aerial Lift Bridge looming over the harbor, and the Lakewalk extending right past for stroller miles. Free parking is generous but fills during summer festivals — check the events calendar before you drive up I-35. Parent gotcha: Duluth summer means 70 one day and 55 the next, so layer up. Walk to Canal Park for ice cream after. Lake Superior at its kid-friendliest.
Centennial Lakes Splash Edina
Centennial Lakes in Edina is the Twin Cities' most polished splash-and-park combo — manicured pond, paddle boats, a splash pad with ground sprays, and the surrounding shopping at Centennial Lakes Plaza for a parents' coffee break. The water area is sized for toddlers through early elementary, with city-of-Edina-clean restrooms and shade structures. Free parking in the plaza ramp. Open Memorial Day through Labor Day, mid-morning through early evening. Closed during thunderstorms and on the rare 50-degree June days that Minnesota throws at you. Pair with mini-golf or a paddle-boat rental. Walk to a coffee shop for an iced latte while the kids dry off. Suburban-MN summer at its best.
Central Park Splash Maple Grove
Maple Grove's Central Park is the suburban gold standard — wide zero-depth splash pad with both toddler ground sprays and big-kid arching jets, a destination playground next door, the amphitheater for free Wednesday concerts, and the Maple Grove Library across the lawn for an air-conditioned reset. Free parking is huge and rarely full. Restrooms are spotless. Best on weekday mornings before the suburban camp groups roll in around 1pm. Parent gotcha: the deck is exposed and the late-afternoon western sun is brutal — claim a shaded pavilion early. Pack a picnic. North-metro suburban summer at its best.
Gold Medal Park Splash Pad
Gold Medal Park is the spiral-mound urban green next to the Guthrie Theater and the small spray feature is the perfect cool-down after a riverfront morning. The pad is modest but the location is pure Minneapolis — Stone Arch Bridge views, the Guthrie's amber overlook a short walk away, and the Mississippi right there. Best on weekday mornings before downtown lunch crowds. Free street parking is plentiful before noon, paid garages within a block. Parent gotcha: the mound is steep and tempting for runners — keep a hand on toddlers near the top. Walk to Owamni or grab ice cream at the Guthrie. Twin Cities riverfront done right.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Highland Park Splash
Highland Park splash sits inside St. Paul's massive Highland recreation complex — pool, golf course, water tower viewpoint, and a kid-friendly splash pad that locals use as the no-fee alternative to the Highland Aquatic Center. Ground sprays, fenced area, playground adjacent. City of Saint Paul keeps the restrooms clean and the pad runs reliably. Free parking, free entry. Open Memorial Day through Labor Day. Pair with a climb up the Highland water tower for the best skyline view in St. Paul. Walk to Highland Village shops for ice cream after. Best on weekday mornings; weekends draw a crowd. Pack water shoes — the surrounding pavement gets hot in July.
Battle Creek Regional Splash
Battle Creek Regional Park is the East Side's hidden gem and the splash pad rivals anything in the Twin Cities suburbs — a wide deck with both gentle ground sprays and arching jets, set against bluff trails and a sledding hill that doubles as a summer kite slope. Ramsey County keeps it spotless. Free parking is plentiful and the picnic pavilions are first-come free. Best on weekday mornings; the East Side knows about it and weekends after noon get busy. Parent gotcha: the surrounding park is huge and stroller-unfriendly off the paved loop — stick to the splash plaza area with little ones. East Saint Paul's quiet win.
Central Park Splash Maple Grove
Maple Grove's Central Park is the suburban gold standard — wide zero-depth splash pad with both toddler ground sprays and big-kid arching jets, a destination playground next door, the amphitheater for free Wednesday concerts, and the Maple Grove Library across the lawn for an air-conditioned reset. Free parking is huge and rarely full. Restrooms are spotless. Best on weekday mornings before the suburban camp groups roll in around 1pm. Parent gotcha: the deck is exposed and the late-afternoon western sun is brutal — claim a shaded pavilion early. Pack a picnic. North-metro suburban summer at its best.
Lake Harriet Bandshell Splash
Lake Harriet bandshell is the heart of southwest Minneapolis summer and the spray feature next to the playground is the bonus most out-of-town parents miss. The pad is small with gentle ground sprays for toddlers, but the setting — sailboats on the lake, free band concerts most evenings, the Bread & Pickle window for grilled cheese — makes a two-hour stop into a four-hour one. Free lakeside parking is tight by 11am; the streetcar from Lake Calhoun runs weekends and is a treat in itself. Parent gotcha: the lake edge has no railing. Bring a blanket for the bandshell lawn. The most beloved Twin Cities afternoon, period.