There are city parks, and then there are city parks with a genuine wonder of nature roaring through the middle of them. Spokane Falls, right in the heart of downtown Riverfront Park, belongs firmly in the second category — and if you have never stood on the pedestrian bridge above those churning, mist-soaked cascades, you are missing one of the Pacific Northwest’s most underrated natural spectacles.
Let me set the scene. You are two blocks from a Starbucks, a streetcar stop, and a perfectly good hotel lobby. And yet you are watching a torrent of glacier-fed water from the Rockies slam over ancient basalt ledges with a noise that you feel in your chest before you hear it with your ears. The Spokane River drops roughly 130 feet through a series of falls right here in the urban core, and the effect is nothing short of dramatic. On a sunny afternoon the spray catches the light and throws tiny rainbows across the walkway. On an overcast morning the whole scene goes silver and cinematic.
The best vantage point is the open-air gondola, the Spokane Falls SkyRide, which lifts you out over the river and delivers a bird’s-eye view of the upper and lower falls together. The ride is gentle enough for anyone, short enough to feel breezy and fun, and the perspective from above — looking straight down at the white water threading between dark rock islands — is something photographs genuinely struggle to capture. Go ahead and take them anyway.
On the ground, the paved paths along the north and south banks of the river wind through the larger Riverfront Park campus, past public art installations, open lawns, and the beautifully restored 1902 Looff Carrousel, a National Historic Landmark housed in its own pavilion a short stroll away. The park sits squarely between the downtown core and the Spokane Arena, so it is extraordinarily easy to fold into any itinerary — arrive early, walk the falls loop, grab coffee from one of the nearby cafés, and you have already had a morning worth talking about.
Spring and early summer are the peak season for volume and drama; snowmelt from the Rockies swells the river and the falls thunder accordingly. But even in late summer, when the flow is calmer, the exposed basalt ledges and the clear green pools create a landscape that feels almost geological in its beauty — a reminder that long before Spokane was a city, this river was carving something extraordinary.
Admission to the park itself is free. The SkyRide gondola has a modest per-ride fee and operates seasonally, so check the Riverfront Park website before you go. Parking is available in the adjacent garages off Spokane Falls Boulevard, and the park is a flat, easy walk from most downtown hotels.
Spokane likes to call itself the Lilac City, but water is its true signature. Come stand above the falls and you will understand immediately why people chose to build a city right here — and why, once they arrived, they never really wanted to leave.