Shinjuku Gyoen by Real Japanese Gardens

Shinjuku Gyoen(新宿御苑)

A Garden Retreat in the Heart of Tokyo Shinjuku Gyoen is one of Tokyo’s largest and most diverse parks, featuring one of the city’s most beautiful Japanese gardens. Located just steps away from Shinjuku Station, this vast landscape blends tradition and modernity with ease. It includes a Japanese garden, a formal French garden, and an […]

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Koishikawa Korakuen by Real Japanese Gardens

Koishikawa Korakuen(小石川後楽園)

Edo-Period Garden Tranquility in the Heart of Tokyo Koishikawa Kōrakuen(小石川後楽園)is one of Tokyo’s oldest surviving gardens, a beautifully preserved example of an Edo-period strolling garden. Begun in 1629 by Tokugawa Yorifusa, the son of Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, it was completed in 1669 by his son Tokugawa Mitsukuni, with the guidance of the Chinese Confucian scholar […]

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Hamarikyu by Real Japanese Gardens

Hamarikyu Teien(浜離宮恩賜庭園)

A Strolling Garden by Tokyo Bay with Shogunal History Hamarikyū Teien is a spacious Edo-period strolling garden located along Tokyo Bay. Originally designed by the Tokugawa shogunate, the garden reflects the power and refinement of the era. Its tidal ponds are unique—connected to the bay, the water levels rise and fall with the tide, creating […]

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Rikugien Garden in Tokyo by Real Japanese Gardens

Rikugien(六義園 )

A Classical Edo-Period Garden Rooted in Poetry Rikugien(六義園)is one of Tokyo’s most elegant and refined Edo-period strolling gardens, located in the quiet neighborhood of Komagome in Bunkyo ward. Built between 1695 and 1702 by Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu—a samurai official under shogun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi—the garden was inspired by classical Waka poetry and originally featured 88 miniature scenes […]

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Zuiho-in by Real Japanese Gardens

Zuiho-in (Daitoku-ji)(瑞峯院)

A Zen Garden Rooted in Christian History Zuihō-in, part of the Daitoku-ji temple complex in Kyoto, stands out not only for its striking gardens but also for its unusual origins. It was founded in 1546 by Ōtomo Sōrin, a powerful Christian daimyo, as his family temple. Remarkably, Zuihō-in still preserves its original architecture, having survived […]

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Japanese Meigetsu-in Temple by Real Japanese Gardens

Meigetsu-in(明月院)

Kamakura’s Hydrangea Temple with Zen Roots Meigetsu-in(明月院)is a Zen temple in Kita-Kamakura, best known for its vibrant hydrangea blossoms (ajisai) that draw thousands of visitors every June. The vivid blue flowers fill the temple grounds during the rainy season, earning it the popular nickname Ajisai-dera (Hydrangea Temple). Founded in 1383 during the Muromachi period by […]

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Jomyo-ji Temple in Kamakura by Real Japanese Gardens

Jomyo-ji(浄妙寺)

A Zen Retreat with Ashikaga Legacy and Garden Tranquility Tucked into the eastern hills of Kamakura, Jōmyō-ji stands as the fifth temple of the Kamakura Gozan, the Five Great Zen Temples. Founded in 1188 by Ashikaga Yoshikane, a samurai who served Minamoto no Yoritomo, the temple began as a Mikkyō (esoteric Buddhism) temple named Gokuraku-ji. […]

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Hokoku-ji by Real Japanese Gardens

Hokoku-ji(報国寺)

Kamakura’s Bamboo Temple of Zen and Samurai Legacy Hōkoku-ji is a small Zen temple in Kamakura, world-famous for its bamboo grove of more than 2,000 mōsō bamboos. For this reason, it is also known as Take-dera, the Bamboo Temple. The temple was founded in 1334, shortly after the fall of the Kamakura shogunate. Ashikaga Ietoki, […]

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Kyoto-Gosho-Main

Kyoto Gosho (Kyoto Imperial Palace)(京都御所)

From Ancient Seat to Serene Garden The Kyoto Imperial Palace was the residence of Japan’s emperors for over a thousand years. From the Heian period (794–1185) until the end of the Edo period (1603–1868), this palace was the heart of the imperial court. However, after the Edo period ended, the Emperor (Tenno) and his court […]

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View of the Kairaku-en garden

Kairaku-en(偕楽園)

One of Japan’s Three Great Gardens Kairaku-en is a famous strolling garden located in Mito City, Ibaraki Prefecture. It was created in 1841 by Tokugawa Nariaki, the ninth feudal lord of the Mito Domain. Unlike many gardens built for nobility or religious purposes, Kairaku-en was intended for the public. Hence, the name “garden to be […]

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