Japanese Garden of Hasselt
Japanese Garden | |
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Type | Japanese garden |
Location | Gouverneur Verwilghensingel 15, Hasselt, Belgium |
Coordinates | 50°56′07″N 5°21′21″E / 50.93528°N 5.35583°E |
Area | 2.5 hectares (6.2 acres) |
Status | Open year round |
The Japanese Garden of Hasselt is a park in the Belgian city of Hasselt. Designed in the traditional 17th-century style, it was donated to the Belgian city by the city of Itami. It is the largest Japanese garden in Europe.[1][2]
History
The garden was designed by the Japanese architect Takayuki Inoue.[1][3] The garden was built by a group of skilled Japanese gardeners in the early 1990s, and inaugurated on 20 November 1992, after 250 working days.[2][1]
The location for the garden was chosen by architect Inoue.[1] The city of Itami provided all financial and material contributions.[1] The planting of the chosen area was preserved as closer to the original as possible, showing the respect for nature of the Japanese.[1]
The skilled Japanese gardeners landscaped the chosen site with a small hill, flowing brook, waterfall, pebbly beach, bridges, tea house and a number of other traditional Japanese buildings.[2][1] Stones were brought from Austria to build the bridges, whereas the buildings were built exclusively with materials brought in from Japan.[1] Many trees and bushes were planted.[1] Measuring 2.5 hectares, Hasselt's Japanese garden is the largest Japanese garden in Europe.[4][5][6]
The best time to visit it is considered to be spring, when 250 cherry trees flower.[4][2]
Gallery
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Bridge with tea house in the background
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Waterfall
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Waterfall 2
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The Tea House
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Hill with traditional Japanese building
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Yatsuhashi bridges
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Sawatari-ishi, stepping stones over water
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Flowering cherry blossom (sakura)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Japanese Garden Today". www.visithasselt.be.
- ^ a b c d "Hidden Belgium: The largest Japanese garden in Europe". The Brussels Times.
- ^ "Chasing Cherry Blossom in Japanse Tuin Hasselt (Japanese Garden of Hasselt)". www.theflashpacker.net.
- ^ a b Jacobs, Peter; Wouter, Rawoens (2003). Best of Belgium la Belgique comme vous devez la voir. Lannoo. p. 54. ISBN 9789020952087.
- ^ De Moor, Paul; Antoine, Jean-Marie; Blyth, Derek (2006). 365 dagen België. Lannoo. ISBN 9789020967821.
- ^ Belgium and Luxembourg. Fodor's Travel Publications. 2001. p. 174. ISBN 9780679007708.