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Copyright © 2004 G. Donald Bain, All Rights Reserved
| Bain Digital Graphics
The famous Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park dates back to 1894. It began as the Japanese village display at the Midwinter Fair, then was relocated and expanded, to its present size of 5 acres. It was designed and maintained by Makoto Hagiwara and later his son-in-law, Goro Tazawa Hagiwara, until World War II, when it was temporarily renamed the Oriental Garden. The garden is beautiful all year, but especially spectacular in March and April when the azaleas and then the cherry trees bloom. The Drum Bridge (also called Half Moon) dates from the original exposition, and is one of dozens of unique bridges over the chain of streams and ponds that runs through the garden. It is situated just below the tea house (which claims to be the American birthplace of the fortune cookie), which still serves Japanese-style green tea.
This is one of eight bridges that I photographed for the Equinox, September 2004. Over 3700 VR panoramas of California and the West can be seen at Don Bain's Virtual Guidebooks
Shortcut to this page: http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/wwp_rss/go/n11
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