There is a moment, usually about thirty seconds after you crest the hill at Devou Park, when the entire Cincinnati skyline unfolds beneath you like a postcard someone forgot to mail. The Ohio River catches the light. Kentucky rolls away on the far bank. And you think, quietly, that you have never quite seen this city before — not like this.
Devou Park sits in Covington, Kentucky, just across the river from downtown Cincinnati, and that geographical quirk is precisely what makes it so spectacular. Technically you have left Ohio, but the park exists entirely in Cincinnati’s cultural and emotional orbit. Locals treat it as their own backyard, and once you visit, you will understand why. The main overlook on Park Road is the single best vantage point for photographing the Cincinnati skyline, and photographers, couples, and families migrate up here at golden hour like clockwork.
But Devou is far more than a scenic pullout. The park spans nearly 550 acres of rolling hills, wooded ravines, and open meadows, making it one of the larger urban green spaces in the greater Cincinnati region. Paved walking and running paths wind through the interior, and the terrain offers enough variety to keep things interesting whether you are out for a casual stroll or a proper workout. In the spring, the park bursts with wildflowers and dogwood blossoms. In the fall, the tree canopy turns into a slow burn of orange and amber that rivals anything New England has to offer.
The park also contains the Devou Park Golf Course, a public nine-hole course that is refreshingly affordable and beginner-friendly, with views that would embarrass courses charging three times the greens fee. There is a disc golf course as well, popular with a laid-back crowd who bring their dogs and their coolers and make an afternoon of it.
Families will find well-maintained playgrounds, open picnic shelters, and a small lake where kids fish on warm afternoons. The bandshell near the overlook hosts free outdoor concerts during the summer months, drawing crowds who spread out blankets and settle in for the kind of unhurried evening that city life rarely offers.
Getting there is straightforward. From downtown Cincinnati, cross the Brent Spence Bridge or the Clay Wade Bailey Bridge into Covington and follow the signs up into the hills — it takes less than ten minutes. Parking is free and plentiful, which feels almost radical in 2024.
What strikes you most about Devou Park is not any single feature but the cumulative generosity of the place. It gives you the skyline, the greenery, the quiet, and the community, all without asking anything in return. Come at sunrise if you can manage it. Bring coffee. Watch the city wake up from above. Cincinnati has never looked so good.