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The Japanese Garden was designed by Ken Nakajima in 1992, includes a teahouse, waterfalls, bridges, and stone paths that wander among crepe myrtles, azaleas, Japanese maples, dogwoods and cherry trees. Hershey Gardens: Hershey: Pennsylvania: Includes a Japanese garden with rare giant sequoias, Dawn Redwood trees, Japanese maples and more.
That garden had some 100 blossoming cherry trees and an arched bridge that led to an island tea garden “with 1,000 lush, tropical plants that surrounded a beautiful, three-story wooden pagoda ...
He then was Landscape director for the Garden Society of Japan (Nihon Teien Kyokai) (1968–1972), during which time he supervised construction of the Portland Japanese Garden. In 1972 he founded Kurisu International, Inc., which has since designed and built a number of gardens.
He designed more than one dozen Japanese style gardens in America after becoming a US citizen in 1971; Seiwa-en is his largest work. The garden contains a Japanese maple tree planted as a gift to the garden by the Emperor of Japan on a visit to St. Louis. There are also Japanese cherry trees planted near the garden's entrance that bloom in spring.
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Moss garden at Tōfuku-ji (1939). Mirei Shigemori was a garden designer who actively participated in many areas of Japanese art and design. Shigemori was born in Kayō, Jōbō District, Okayama Prefecture, and in his youth was exposed to lessons in traditional tea ceremony and flower arrangement, as well as landscape ink and wash painting.
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Landero commissioned Matsumoto to design and construct a garden on his ranch near the city of Pachuca. After completing this commission, Matsumoto briefly sojourned in the United States, and worked on the Japanese garden built in Golden Gate Park as part of the 1894 World's Fair in San Francisco. [2] In 1896, Matsumoto permanently emigrated to ...