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  2. Chōzubachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chōzubachi

    Usually made of stone, it plays an important role in the tea ceremony. Guests use it to wash their hands before entering the tearoom, a practice originally adapted from the custom of rinsing one’s mouth and cleansing one’s body in the chōzuya before entering the sacred precincts of a Shinto shrine or a Buddhist temple .

  3. Suikinkutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suikinkutsu

    Water drips through the hole at the top onto a small pool of water inside of the pot, creating a pleasant splashing sound that rings inside of the pot similar to a bell or Japanese zither. It is usually built next to a traditional Japanese stone basin called chōzubachi, part of a tsukubai for washing hands before the Japanese tea ceremony

  4. Hestercombe Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hestercombe_Gardens

    Locally occurring slate (native Lias, called Morte) was used on a larger scale, mainly for walls, stone slabs, step installations, or water basins. [8] [9] Lutyens adopted the technique of building dry-stone walls using shale layers, a method commonly found in the southwest of England where the garden is located. Walls of this type could be ...

  5. Forestiere Underground Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forestiere_Underground_Gardens

    The gardens have skylights and catch basins for water. The dirt that was moved to create the large structure was used elsewhere to fill planters, create stones placed within the catacombs, and to level out other parts of the land. The hardpan he excavated was reused as bricks for archways and supports.

  6. Fountain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain

    The Persian rulers of the Middle Ages had elaborate water distribution systems and fountains in their palaces and gardens. Water was carried by a pipe into the palace from a source at a higher elevation. Once inside the palace or garden it came up through a small hole in a marble or stone ornament and poured into a basin or garden channels.

  7. Chōzuya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chōzuya

    The temizu-ya ("temizu-area" [citation needed]) is usually an open area where clear water fills one or various stone basins. [citation needed] Dippers (hishaku (杓)) are usually available to worshippers. In the 1990s, water for temizu at shrines was sometimes from domestic wells, and sometimes from the municipal supply. [1]