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  2. Chashitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chashitsu

    Jo-an is a chashitsu (tea house) and inscribed as a National Treasure. Chashitsu in its garden setting, Itsuku-shima, c. 1900. Chashitsu (茶室, "tea room") in Japanese tradition is an architectural space designed to be used for tea ceremony (chanoyu) gatherings.

  3. List of Japanese gardens in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_gardens...

    Includes a Japanese arts teaching facility, Japan House, with tea garden (2002), dry or Zen garden (2003). The gardens are free, and open dawn to dusk, but the walled tea garden is closed during icy weather. [31] Wa-Shin-An Japanese Tea House and Meditation Garden: South Hadley: Massachusetts

  4. Ochaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ochaya

    Though the term ochaya literally means "tea house", the term follows the naming conventions of buildings or rooms used for Japanese tea ceremony, known as chashitsu (茶室, lit. "tea room"); as such, though tea is served at ochaya as an ordinary beverage, it is not, unlike teahouses and tearooms found throughout the world, its sole purpose.

  5. Japanese Tea Garden (San Francisco) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Tea_Garden_(San...

    The Tea House has been a part of the Japanese Tea Garden since its creation at the Mid-winter Fair in 1894, though it has been rebuilt several times. [6] [7] [8] In a description of the garden published in 1950, at a time when it was "dubbed the Oriental Tea Garden" the author, Katherine Wilson, states that "further along from the Wishing Bridge was the thatched teahouse, where for three ...

  6. Zui-Ki-Tei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zui-Ki-Tei

    Zui-Ki-Tei (瑞暉 亭, "The House of the Promising Light/Home of the Auspicious Light") is a free standing Japanese tea ceremony house (from now on, chashitsu) that can be found in the park outside of the Museum of Ethnography (Etnografiska museet) in Stockholm, Sweden. It was built in Japan before being shipped to Sweden and erected in the ...

  7. Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_tea_ceremony

    Master Sen no Rikyū, who codified the way of tea (painting by Hasegawa Tōhaku) An open tea house serving matcha (ippuku issen (一服一銭), right) and a peddler selling extracts (senjimono-uri (煎じ物売) left), illustration from Shichiju-ichiban shokunin utaawase (七十一番職人歌合), Muromachi period; Ippuku issen 's monk clothing depicts the relationship between matcha culture ...

  8. Eugene J. de Sabla, Jr., Teahouse and Tea Garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_J._de_Sabla,_Jr...

    The entrance to the garden. The Eugene J. de Sabla, Jr., Teahouse and Tea Garden is a historic garden located in San Mateo, bordering Hillsborough, California.It has been described as both a Higurashi-en and a Shin-style garden and is the only surviving private garden designed by the widely respected Japanese garden designer Makoto Hagiwara.

  9. List of teahouses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_teahouses

    Some cultures have a variety of distinct tea-centered houses of different types that all qualify under the English language term "teahouse" or "tearoom". For example, the British or American tearoom serves afternoon tea with a variety of small cakes.

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