Winding Walkways to Private Places of Peace

Chinese and Japanese gardens often build up a sense of being taken out of the ordinary world into somewhere especially peaceful and delightful.

Room With a View

A moon gate in a garden in Scarborough

At some Chinese gardens, you enter along winding, covered walkways with roofs and elaborately shaped windows. These windows frame particular views of the garden for people on the walkway. Gateways in unusual shapes also frame views. A winding path across water Often these gateways are shaped like a full moon and hence called ‘moon gates’. The walkways can lead to a beautiful pavilion beside a pool or on a little hill or in woodland, where the idea is that you feel content just to sit and be.

Japanese gardens sometimes use very winding paths to prolong your journey to a special resting place to make you feel you’ve come far from the outside world. There may be little bridges and gates to pass through or stepping-stones to heighten this feeling. There may be a thick band of bushes round the outside to make the outside world seem far away.

In these gardens, rather than walk wherever you like, you follow pathways which create a planned tour of the garden and give you a planned experience with particular views.

Continue reading: Representing the elements.

Other Sources of Information

www.chinaplanner.com/gardens/ - For information and photos of Chinese gardens.

learn.bowdoin.edu/japanesegardens/gardens/intro/ - For virtual tours of Japanese gardens.

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