Washington Park Splash Pad
701 S Franklin St · Wash Park / Platt Park
Wash Park is Denver's most beloved neighborhood park — two lakes, gardens, the running loop, and a small splash feature near the playground. The pad itself is modest but the surrounding park is what makes it the kind of place you spend three hours instead of one. Free street parking is fierce on summer weekends — bike or walk if you live nearby. Restrooms are clean, picnic tables abundant. Best on weekday mornings or after 4pm when heat eases. Parent gotcha: Denver UV at 5,280 feet hits hard on the open lawn, so sunscreen and hats are non-negotiable. Wash Park sits in a slight bowl that traps wildfire smoke from western Colorado fires on still summer days. Pair with a Sushi Den or Park Burger walk after.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🌳Shade
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Washington Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Washington Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Washington Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Washington Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Washington Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Central Park (formerly Stapleton) Splash Pad
Central Park (the renamed Stapleton) is Denver's flagship suburban green space and the splash pad lives up to the neighborhood's master-planned ambition. Wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets that arc high for grade-schoolers, separate gentle ground sprays for toddlers, plus a destination playground and the Founders' Green for picnics. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings before mid-day arrivals. Parent gotcha: Denver's mile-high UV is no joke — the burn at altitude happens 30% faster than at sea level, so sunscreen religiously and reapply after every spray cycle. Late August through September wildfire smoke from western Colorado and Wyoming fires routinely pushes AQI past 150 here. Check Colorado Smoke Outlook before you commit. Mountain views as a bonus.
Cheesman Park Splash Pad
Cheesman Park is the Denver classic — sweeping mountain views west to the Front Range, mature trees, the Cheesman Pavilion as the photo backdrop. The splash pad is modest, ground sprays sized for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, but the surrounding lawn is the real draw. Free street parking is competitive, arrive before 10am or expect to walk. Restrooms by the playground. Best on weekday mornings. Parent gotcha: Denver sun at 5,280 feet burns kids in 15-20 minutes without sunscreen, and the open park has limited shade outside the trees. Wildfire smoke from western slopes and the Cameron Peak/East Troublesome historical fires settles into Cheesman's bowl-shape on still days. Pair with a Liks Ice Cream stop on 13th Ave after for the perfect Denver afternoon.
City Park Splash Pad
City Park is Denver's biggest park — Denver Zoo, Museum of Nature & Science, Ferril Lake, and a splash pad near the playground that turns a museum day into a full afternoon. The pad itself is a smaller scale than Central Park but the surrounding amenities make it the highest-leverage stop in town. Free parking on park roads, paid garage at the museum. Restrooms inside the museum and zoo, port-a-potties near the splash. Best on weekday mornings before zoo crowds. Parent gotcha: high-altitude UV demands sunscreen reapplication every 90 minutes — kids burn faster than you remember. Late summer wildfire smoke from western Colorado and Wyoming routinely closes outdoor amenities; Denver's haze pockets in the South Platte basin. Pair with the museum's IMAX as the smoke-day Plan B.
Civic Center Park Fountain
Civic Center Park sits between the State Capitol and the Denver Art Museum, and the seasonal interactive water features turn the plaza into a downtown splash stop on hot summer days. It's not a dedicated splash pad — it's a civic fountain with ground jets — but kids run through it freely and the central location makes it the perfect break between the Capitol tour and lunch on 16th Street Mall. Paid garages nearby, restrooms in surrounding civic buildings. Parent gotcha: this is a real urban plaza, so cleanliness varies and you should bring water shoes — broken glass is rare but not unheard of. Mile-high UV burns fast on the open plaza and mid-summer wildfire smoke from western fires settles between the downtown buildings. Pair with the museum.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Gateway Park Splash Pad
Gateway Park is the neighborhood spray spot for east Aurora families near the airport corridor, and it gets the kind of multicultural lunch-cooler crowd that makes a regular city park feel like a community block party. Ground sprays sized for toddlers and early elementary, a real playground attached, and shade structures over the picnic tables — a small but legitimate detail Aurora got right. Free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best in the late morning before the heat peaks. Parent gotcha: Aurora afternoons in July see fast-building monsoon thunderstorms rolling in off the foothills around 2-3pm — the pad shuts immediately at lightning. The high-plains UV combined with the dry air dehydrates kids faster than parents expect; pack twice the water you think you need. Quiet weekday mornings are the move.
Belmar Park Splash Pad
Belmar Park is a real surprise — a 132-acre lake-and-park complex tucked behind the Belmar shopping district that most Denverites don't realize exists until they need a midweek splash escape. The spray feature is a small dedicated zone with ground sprays for toddlers, set near the lake and walking paths, with a playground a short walk away. Free parking in the Belmar shopping garages, real restrooms. Best on weekday mornings — the path traffic picks up after lunch. Parent gotcha: Front Range UV at 5,500 feet is no joke; sunscreen the kids before they hit the pad. Monsoon afternoons in July and August produce fast-building thunderstorms off the foothills and the pad will shut at lightning. Pair with a Belmar shopping-district lunch — Whole Foods has tons of stroller seating.
City Park Splash Pad
City Park is Denver's biggest park — Denver Zoo, Museum of Nature & Science, Ferril Lake, and a splash pad near the playground that turns a museum day into a full afternoon. The pad itself is a smaller scale than Central Park but the surrounding amenities make it the highest-leverage stop in town. Free parking on park roads, paid garage at the museum. Restrooms inside the museum and zoo, port-a-potties near the splash. Best on weekday mornings before zoo crowds. Parent gotcha: high-altitude UV demands sunscreen reapplication every 90 minutes — kids burn faster than you remember. Late summer wildfire smoke from western Colorado and Wyoming routinely closes outdoor amenities; Denver's haze pockets in the South Platte basin. Pair with the museum's IMAX as the smoke-day Plan B.
Memorial Park Splash Pad
Memorial Park is Colorado Springs' flagship park — skate park, pool, fields, and a splash pad that draws the south-side neighborhood crowd all summer. The pad is sized for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, with the destination playground attached and shaded picnic spots along the edge. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms by the pool building. Best on weekday mornings before noon. Parent gotcha: Colorado Springs at 6,000+ feet means UV hits hard and dry mountain air dehydrates kids in under an hour — bring water bottles and reapply sunscreen religiously. Late summer wildfire smoke from front-range fires (Hayman, Black Forest historical scars) returns most years and can force closures. Check El Paso County air quality before driving. Real Springs summer staple.