J.C. Nichols Memorial Fountain, by Henri-Léon Gréber (1910, reinstalled in Kansas City and dedicated in 1960) at 47th Street and J.C. Nichols Parkway, Country Club Plaza.
Muse of the Missouri, by Wheeler Williams, downtown, Main Street at 9th Street.
Henry Wollman Bloch Fountain, in front of Union Station, at W. Pershing Road at Main Street.
Children's Fountain, by Tom Corbin, at Oak Trafficway & Burlington (MO Hwy 9).
Volker Fountain, 28 ft (8.5 m) high waterfall and basin along Brush Creek, Volker Boulevard, between Oak St. and Rockhill Road.
Double Monopole, by Keith Sonnier; twin 60-foot (18 m) high waterfall sculptures lighted by red, blue, and yellow neon lights, in the median of Cookingham Drive at Paris Street, at Kansas City International Airport.
Fountain of Bacchus, W. 47th Street at Chandler Court in The Plaza. The main sculpture is made of 10,000 lb (4,500 kg). of cast lead.
Firefighters' Fountain, W. 31st Street and Broadway.
Pomona, fountain sculpture by Donatello Gabbrielli, at Ward Parkway & Broadway, in The Plaza.
Northland Fountain, at Oak Trafficway & Vivion Road.
Eagle Scout Memorial Fountain, E. 39th Street at Gillham Road.
Crown Center Square Fountain at Crown Center, Grand Avenue & E. Pershing during the holidays.
Crown Center Square Fountain. "Dancing Waters" shows with synchronized 60 ft (18 m) high jets of water run every hour all day on weekends, and at noon & evening hours on weekdays.
Meyer Circle ("Seahorse") Fountain, at Meyer Boulevard & Ward Parkway. The fountain hosts a 17th century Venetian sculpture.
Waterworks Spectacular, at Kauffman Stadium.
Fountains in Brush Creek, along Ward Parkway, in The Plaza.
Mermaid Fountain, at Nichols Road & Broadway, in The Plaza.
Fountains form part of the Kansas City's core identity and culture, and it even uses a graphic design of a stylized fountain in its official logo2.
Interest in fountains in Kansas City arose during the City Beautiful movement in the 1890s. In 1899, George Kessler, a landscape architect and urban planner, designed the first fountain built by the city of Kansas City, Missouri at 15th and The Paseo. Although this fountain was destroyed in 1941, another fountain designed by him in the same year continues to exist and is the oldest in the city. Now known as The Women's Leadership Fountain, it is located at 9th and The Paseo and was restored in 1990. It originally included an oval cut limestone basin surrounded by a raised sidewalk, a flower garden, gas lamps and a balustrade above to the south. The water sprayed upwards from a nozzle in the center.3 Kessler went on to include numerous plans for fountains in his urban designs of the park and boulevard system.
Typically, most of the first fountains in Kansas City served practical rather than decorative purposes. In 1904, the Humane Society of Kansas City (Kansas) – established to prevent cruelty to women, children and animals – built a characteristic fountain near the west end of Minnesota Avenue at N. 3rd Street. Water poured out of spigots in lions' mouths so people could get clean water in their cups. This water fell into a granite basin at a height for horses to drink. The overflow from the basin went into four small pools at street level for dogs to drink. A street light was on top. (In 1967, the fountain was given to the Wyandotte County Museum.) The Humane Society went on to mount more than 100 fountains, including ones made of bronze created for people alone for sanitary purposes.4
Fountain building and the use of decorative statuary exploded in the 1920s after developer J.C. Nichols used them extensively in the development of Country Club Plaza. The most famous fountain in Kansas City is appropriately named J.C. Nichols Memorial Fountain. The figures were originally created by French sculptor Henri-Léon Gréber in 1910 for "Harbor Hill," the estate of Clarence Mackay in Roslyn, New York. The four allegorical equestrian figures reportedly represent four great rivers of the world — the Mississippi River, Volga River, Seine River, and Rhine River.5 The work is enlivened by sculptures of little children riding dolphins in the pool surrounding the main figures.
The William Volker Memorial Fountain includes the last sculptures by Swedish artist Carl Milles. The five-piece ensemble of bronze statuary shows Saint Martin of Tours, patron saint of France, on horseback, giving his clothes to a beggar surrounded by two angels (one amusingly wearing a wristwatch) and a curious little demon in hiding. The sculptures rest between two pools of water with jet sprays along Volker Boulevard, and sits above a dramatic three-tier, 28 ft (8.5 m) waterfall into a basin on Brush Creek.6
The Eagle Scout Memorial Fountain was originally part of the Seventh Avenue clock at Pennsylvania Station in New York City. When the station was torn down, Kansas City petitioned to obtain the clock sculpture and replaced its face with an Eagle Scout tribute.
The "Waterworks Spectacular" has been dousing the outfield during baseball games at Kauffman Stadium for over 30 years.
List of fountains in the Kansas City metropolitan area