Cincinnati has one crown jewel few outside the Queen City know about: the Cincinnati Parks system.
The Trust for Public Land regularly ranks Cincinnati Parks among the nation’s top 10 park systems for large cities – a title earned through park equity, acreage, investment and amenities. Here are nine of the best city parks to explore across Cincinnati.
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A 1930s-era pavilion draws photographers far and wide, but the hilltop views are equally as dazzling, with panoramas from the Little Miami River to the city's skyline. Relax among flowers and forests in the park’s picnic facilities and gardens. Or, get that heart pumping on one of the park’s nine connected trails.
There are many family-friendly options at Smale Riverfront Park, from the adventure playground with rock-climbing canyons and a granite amphitheater, to the cascading and illuminated splash-friendly fountains. The hand-carved Carol Ann’s Carousel and the Skystar Observation Wheel add amusement-park fun, while the Cincinnati Bike Center offers on-site rentals to explore the park’s connected riverfront neighbors, Sawyer Point Park and TM Berry International Friendship Park.
The park’s facilities impress just as well as its dense forests, with a wheelchair-accessible public treehouse, two forest lodges and 23 picnic areas. A dog park, disc golf center and the 30-acre Mt. Airy Arboretum rounds out the park’s diverse roster of experiences.
But Eden Park is more than a natural escape. The park’s also packed with arts and culture, starting with the Cincinnati Art Museum, Playhouse in the Park theater and Seasongood Pavilion all within its bounds.
Originally an old stone quarry, Inwood Park offers city dwellers tranquility and entertainment, with the 20-acre park just two miles north of downtown. Nods to Inwood Park’s transformational history abound. Cincinnatians voted to turn the space from quarry to park in 1904, and the original Inwood Pavilion, built in 1910, stands tall to this day – as does the granite-boulder statue of Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, the “father of gymnastics,” built in 1911.
But there’s more to Inwood Park than history. There’s a lake, a play area and the newest addition: the fully accessible Grow Up Great playground, with a 90-foot zipline, miniature houses, musical instruments and a wheelchair-accessible spinner.
Washington Park is filled with Cincinnati’s top attractions, from the adjacent Music Hall performance venue and onsite urban flea market, The City Flea, to the American Classical Music Walk of Fame – complete with a dancing fountain. As adults grab brews and wines from the park’s open-air beer garden, The Porch, little ones flock to the imaginative playground, packed with a castle, climbing wall, boardwalk and water activities. This playful park is one of the best for toddlers in Cincinnati.
Adjacent to the Trailside Nature Center is Burnet Woods’ top attraction: the Wolff Planetarium, the oldest planetarium west of the Allegheny Mountains. The 12-foot dome fits up to 20 people; local naturalists narrate these night-sky immersions, with star simulations from every latitude and season.
Speaking of size, the destination is by far the best Cincinnati park for dogs, with a 10-acre dog park and sectioned-off areas for small and big dogs. And water-sports enthusiasts can launch kayaks and canoes into the Little Miami River straight from Otto Armleder Memorial Park’s shores.
Hit the park’s hiking trails for the chance to spot one of these critters, and don’t miss the butterfly and hummingbird garden near the nature center, where park rangers sit at the ready to answer visitor questions.
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