Step into the refined cultural world of Edo-period Japan on this immersive private tour of Rikugien Garden, one of Tokyo’s most celebrated daimyo strolling gardens. Created in 1702 by Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu, a trusted advisor to the fifth Tokugawa shogun Tsunayoshi, Rikugien represents the height of early eighteenth-century garden design and intellectual taste.
Its name, meaning “Six Principles of Poetry,” reflects the deep connection between landscape and classical Japanese waka poetry, which inspired the garden’s carefully composed scenery. As you pass through the main gate and leave the surrounding city behind, the atmosphere shifts dramatically, revealing a meticulously designed world of tranquil water, sculpted hills, winding paths, and framed vistas.
Built in the kaiyū-shiki (strolling-style) tradition, the garden is meant to be experienced in motion; each step reveals a new perspective, echoing poetic imagery drawn from classical literature. Walking beside the central pond and ascending gentle elevations, learn how political power, aesthetic refinement, and literary imagination intersected in the culture of Edo’s ruling elite.
The garden’s layout is not accidental—borrowed scenery, shifting sightlines, and symbolic landscapes are intentionally arranged to evoke distant mountains, famous poetic sites, and idealized natural beauty within a compact urban space. As the journey unfolds, seasonal changes—fresh spring greens, deep summer foliage, brilliant autumn colours, or the quiet clarity of winter—transform the same scenery into entirely different emotional experiences.
The tour culminates at Fukiage Chaya teahouse, where you will sit facing the serene pond and enjoy a bowl of freshly prepared matcha accompanied by a traditional Japanese sweet. In this quiet moment, the garden ceases to be merely an object of observation and becomes a lived aesthetic experience, engaging taste, scent, texture, and atmosphere.
Rather than simply viewing a historical site, encounter Rikugien as it was intended: a harmonious fusion of poetry, politics, landscape architecture, and contemplative pleasure that continues to embody the cultural sophistication of the Edo period.