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The Portland Japanese Garden is a traditional Japanese Garden occupying 5.5 acres (22,000 m²), located within Washington Park in the west hills of Portland, Oregon , USA at . HISTORY AND AWARDS The garden was designed by Professor Takuma Tono beginning in 1963, though the garden opened to the public in 1967. In a study conducted by the ''Journal of Japanese Gardening'', it was ranked first out of 300 public Japanese gardens outside of Japan [http://www.japanesegarden.com/information/faq.shtml and considered to be one of the most authentic. This is notable because a traditional Japanese garden normally takes hundreds of years to evolve and mature, but the Portland Japanese Garden evolved much more quickly—a fusion of hurried western style and stately eastern expression. DESIGN According to traditional design, the garden combines three elements which represent the earth: stone represents mountains and islands for strength and support, water is the center and represents purity, and plants grace it with texture, color and growth. Themes include the terrain from Portland to the Cascade Mountain Range and subtle "hide and reveal" so movement through the garden reveals continuously changing views. FEATURES The garden has five major subgardens, each of a different degree of formality:
LOGISTICS The ''Japanese Garden'' is close to Washington Park's main entrance, at the top of Park Place, just above and a short walk of the International Rose Test Garden . Parking can be scarce on sunny days, but TriMet line 63 stops nearby. The Portland Japanese Garden is across from the tennis courts. Also, the Washington Park And Zoo Railroad has a station by the rose garden. During the summer, it connects to the Oregon Zoo , World Forestry Center , MAX , Portland Children's Museum , Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Hoyt Arboretum . SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS |
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