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Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden (officially Nikka Yuko Centennial Garden) is a 3.75-acre (15,200 m 2) traditional Japanese garden located in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. The garden was designed by Dr. Masami Sugimoto and Dr. Tadashi Kubo of Osaka Prefecture University in Japan .
Prior to being absorbed by the City of Edmonton on April 17, 1917, [14] the Village of West Edmonton, also known as Calder, [15] comprised one quarter section [16] at the northeast corner of 127 Street and 127 Avenue [14] near the northwest corner of Edmonton's mature area sector. [1]
Includes a Japanese garden designed by Hoichi Kurisu, covers 14 acres, including a 4-1/2 acre lake. This is a chisen kaiyu-shiki or “wet strolling garden.” Duke Farms: Hillsborough: New Jersey: The Japanese section includes a small teahouse, a wood bridge, fuji, azaleas, primrose, crocus, and a karesansui dry garden. Earl Burns Miller ...
Edo Japan, often known simply as Edo (/ ˈ iː d oʊ /), is an Australian-founded Canadian fast food restaurant chain specializing in Japanese Teppan-style cooking. [2] Founded in 1979 in Sydney, Australia by Reverend Susumu Ikuta, [3] a Japanese Buddhist minister, Edo Japan was named after the original name of Tokyo. [4]
A lamp and forest path in the Japanese garden. The gardens extend over 30 hA (80 acres) of 12,000-year-old sand dune shoreline of pre-glacial Lake Edmonton and include an additional 65 hA (160 acres) of natural areas.
Summer village 27 N Bon Accord: Town 1,461 N Bruderheim: Town 1,329 N Calmar: Town 2,183 N Devon: Town 6,545 Y Edmonton: City 1,010,899 972,223 2019 Y Enoch Cree Nation 135: Indian reserve 1,825 N Fort Saskatchewan: City 27,088 26,942 2019 Y Gibbons: Town 3,218 N Golden Days: Summer village 248 N Itaska Beach: Summer village 30 N Kapasiwin ...
Communities with shrinking populations are allowed to retain village status even if the number of residents falls below the 300 limit. Some of Alberta's villages have never reached a population of 300 people, but were incorporated as villages before there was a requirement to have a population of 300 or more.
Of all regions of Ohio, central Ohio has the largest Japanese national population. [4] According to the "2013 Japanese Direct Investment Survey" by the Consulate-General of Japan in Detroit, Dublin had 2,002 Japanese nationals and Columbus had 705 Japanese nationals, [5] giving those cities in the highest such populations in the state.