
Isuien Garden
Nara's finest stroll garden — a succession of ponds, bridges, and viewpoints that incorporate Mt Mikasa and the Great Buddha Hall roof into the composition as "borrowed scenery." Built in the 17th and 19th centuries, it remains one of Japan's most sophisticated examples of the shakkei technique.
45–60 min
¥1,200
9:30–16:00 (last entry 15:30); closed Tue
March–May, October–November
15 min walk from Kintetsu Nara Station
Location
Why Visit
- 1
The shakkei (borrowed scenery) composition frames Todaiji's Great Buddha Hall roof as part of the garden
- 2
Two separate Edo-period gardens joined into one — east and west sections have different characters
- 3
Deer wander into the garden from Nara Park — you may find one sharing your viewing bench
Local Tips
One of Japan's finest borrowed-landscape gardens — the Nandaimon Gate of Todai-ji and the forested hills of Kasugayama appear as a seamless extension of the garden. The garden has two sections (Edo and Meiji) connected by a teahouse. Combine with Yoshikien Garden next door (free for foreign tourists) for a full garden morning.
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