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The Kyoto Gardens of Honolulu Memorial Park is a cemetery located in the eastern half of the Honolulu Memorial Park, 22 Craigside Place, Honolulu, Hawaii. Its three-tiered Sanju Pagoda, the Kinkaku-ji Temple, and Mirror Gardens are fine examples of Japanese traditional-style structures and gardens built outside Japan.
Kyoto Gardens of Honolulu Memorial Park: Honolulu: Hawaii: Cemetery with three-tiered Sanju Pagoda, Kinkaku-ji Temple, and Mirror Gardens Kyoto Garden at Oklahoma Science Museum: Oklahoma City: Oklahoma: Gifted to the State of Oklahoma in 1984 as a symbol of friendship between Kyoto and Oklahoma.
Around those ponds are lush Japanese gardens set against a backdrop of towering cliffs of the Koʻolau Range. The gardens are home to sparrows and peafowl. The temple covers 11,000 sq ft (1,000 m 2). [4] The Byodo-In Temple is visited and used by thousands of worshipers from around the world.
*Ginkaku-ji Gardens 慈照寺(銀閣寺)庭園 Jishōji (Ginkakuji) teien: Kyōto: also a Special Historic Site: 1 *Kinkaku-ji Gardens 鹿苑寺(金閣寺)庭園 Rokuonji (Kinkakuji) teien: Kyōto: also a Special Historic Site
*Rokuon-ji Gardens 鹿苑寺(金閣寺)庭園 Rokuonji (Kinkakuji) teien: Kita-ku, Kyoto: also a Special Place of Scenic Beauty; component of the World Heritage Site Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu Cities) [4] Rokuonji (Kinkakuji) Gardens
The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx has been a world-class institute since 1891 when, ... some of the world's most beautiful botanic gardens can be found in bustling cities like Montreal ...
The conception of gardens in a group of three is found elsewhere, for example, in the three gardens of Emperor Go-Mizunoo, who abdicated in 1629. At Shugakuin Imperial Villa, Go-Mizunoo maintained landscaped areas at separate elevations on the northeastern outskirts of Kyoto. [2]
Shosei-en Garden (渉成園) is a garden in Kyoto, Japan. The garden has teahouses, a hall with a Buddhist altar, and two ponds. The garden has teahouses, a hall with a Buddhist altar, and two ponds. The garden was named by Sennyo Shōnin, who used the garden as a residence when he retired in 1653 and was gifted the land by the shōgun Tokugawa ...