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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.
Hakone Gardens: Saratoga: California: 18-acre Japanese estate, retreat and gardens, includes a bamboo garden, Zen garden, strolling garden, tea houses, and the Cultural Exchange Center, which is an authentic reproduction of a 19th-century Kyoto tea merchant's house and shop. Hammond Museum and Japanese Stroll Garden: North Salem: New York
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 ...
It was established via a 1922 bond measure of US$80,000 (equivalent to $1,460,000 in 2023) to purchase the land originally owned by Charles B. Polhemus, and currently hosts a baseball field, tennis courts, sculptures, playground, Japanese tea garden, recreation center, miniature train, rose garden and the San Mateo Arboretum.
Kotani-En is a classical Japanese residence in the formal style of a 13th-century estate with tile roofed walls surrounding a tea house, shrine, gardens, and ponds. Constructed for Max M. Cohen in 1918-1924 of mahogany, cedar, bamboo, and ceramic tile by master artisan Takashima and eleven craftsmen from Japan, Kotani-En represents a harmonious ...
With a 4,000-square-foot main house, four bedrooms, four bathrooms and a guest house, the entire estate and palm garden at 35 Amberwood Lane is available off-market for $3.8 million.
According to the Los Angeles Conservancy, the garden is among the largest and most significant private residential Japanese-style gardens built in the United States in the immediate Post-World War II period. [1] The garden was donated to the University of California, Los Angeles in 1965 and open to the public until 2011. Following a legal ...
The Bernheimer Gardens were 8-acre (350,000 sq ft; 32,000 m 2; 3.2 ha) 20th-century formal gardens in California in the United States that showcased a private collection of bronze statues from Asia. The gardens were open to the public at (corner of Marquez Street) in Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles , below what is now the Sunset Highlands ...