There are places in this world that seem designed specifically to make you slow down, breathe deeply, and remember why you love being alive. Founders Park, nestled along the Potomac River in the heart of Old Town Alexandria, is exactly that kind of place. I discovered it on a crisp Saturday morning a few years back, coffee in hand, and I have been returning ever since — sometimes with purpose, sometimes simply because I needed to be reminded how beautiful this stretch of the East Coast really is.
Founders Park sits at the northern end of Alexandria’s historic waterfront district, just steps from the cobblestoned streets of Old Town and a short walk from the King Street Metro station. The location alone is worth celebrating. You get sweeping, unobstructed views of the Potomac, with the Maryland shoreline visible across the water and, on clear days, a distant sense of the river bending toward the Chesapeake. Cargo ships drift past. Kayakers cut across the glassy water. The occasional sailboat tilts gracefully in the breeze. It is the kind of panorama that makes you forget your inbox exists.
The park itself is beautifully maintained — open, grassy, and welcoming without being over-manicured. There are benches positioned at just the right angles for watching the water, and the gentle slope of the lawn practically invites you to spread out a blanket and spend an hour doing absolutely nothing productive. Families come here to picnic, dog walkers loop through in the early morning, and history enthusiasts stop to read the interpretive markers that explain the park’s connection to Alexandria’s Colonial-era past as a thriving tobacco port.
What makes the experience even richer is the neighborhood that wraps around it. Union Street runs parallel to the waterfront, lined with acclaimed restaurants like Chart House and the storied Landini Brothers, where you can duck in for a plate of housemade pasta after your stroll. The boardwalk connects Founders Park southward through Waterfront Park and past the marina, all the way toward the shops and galleries of the lower waterfront. It is easily one of the most walkable, visually rewarding stretches in the entire D.C. metro area.
Come in the spring when the cherry trees along the waterfront are in full bloom and the light off the Potomac turns gold in the late afternoon. Come in the summer for the outdoor concerts and festivals that animate the park on weekends. Come in the fall, when the foliage reflects in the river and the crowds thin out just enough to feel like you have discovered a secret. Come in the winter, when the cold air sharpens everything and the quiet is almost meditative.
Founders Park is free, open year-round, and endlessly rewarding. If you are planning a visit to Alexandria — and you absolutely should be — make this your first stop. Let the river orient you, let the history settle in, and then wander. You will not regret a single minute of it.