Stroll Through a Japanese Garden - Huntington Library
Free Garden Tours At Huntington Library
Free tours of the gardens are available with general admission or membership. Tours are offered Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday between noon and 2 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Times vary depending on volunteer availability; please check in at the Information Desk on arrival for the day's schedule of garden tours. Sorry, free tours cannot be reserved in advance. No tours available on Tuesdays and Free Days.
Japanese Gardens Page
http://www.huntington.org/huntingtonlibrary.aspx?id=512
Free Day
Admission to The Huntington is free to all visitors on the first Thursday of every month with advanced tickets. Hours on Free Day are 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Botanical Gardens
The Botanical Gardens are an ever-changing exhibition of color and a constant delight. Covering 120 acres, more than a dozen specialized gardens are arranged within a park-like landscape of rolling lawns. Among the most remarkable are the Desert Garden, the Japanese Garden, the Rose Garden, and the Chinese garden. The camellia collection is one of the largest in the country. Other important botanical attractions include the Subtropical, Herb, Jungle, and Palm gardens.
To the north of the Scott Galleries sits the Botanical Education Center, featuring the Helen and Peter Bing Children’s Garden, the Teaching Greenhouse, and The Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science. The Conservatory provides children and families with exhibits designed to capture the imagination, engage the senses, and teach some of the fundamentals of botany. The Children’s Garden is most suitable for kids ages 2-7; the Conservatory is designed for middle-school-age students.
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Phone: (626) 405-2100
Website: Click to Visit
Browse Events at this Location
The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based research and educational institution established in 1919 by Henry E. and Arabella Huntington. Henry Huntington, a key figure in the development of Southern California in the early 20th century, was also an active collector of rare books and manuscripts, art, and plants. By the time he established the institution, he and his wife had amassed an extensive collection focusing on British and American history, literature, and art, as well as rare and spectacular plant specimens.
Located 12 miles from Los Angeles in San Marino, California, the institution serves some 1,800 scholars each year conducting advanced research in the humanities. The librarys rare books and manuscripts constitute one of the worlds largest and most extensively used collections in America outside of the Library of Congress. Researchers who use the collections produce the leading scholarly books and articles in their fields. These, in turn, become the basis for the textbooks that are used in elementary, secondary, and undergraduate education across the nation. The Huntington also serves some 20,000 school children in the Los Angeles area, providing informal botanical, art, and library education through extensive on-site programs. Among the treasures for research and exhibition are the Ellesmere manuscript of Chaucers Canterbury Tales, a Gutenberg Bible on vellum, the double-elephant folio edition of Audubons Birds of America, a world-class collection of the early editions of Shakespeares works, original letters of Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, and Lincoln, and an unsurpassed collection of materials relating to the history of the American West.
The librarys 120 acres of botanical gardens are divided into multiple thematic areas: the Rose Garden, Shakespeare and Herb Gardens, Desert Garden, Japanese Garden, Australian Garden, Subtropical and Jungle Garden, Palm Garden, North Vista, and Camellia Collection. The newly constructed Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science is home to multiple interactive educational exhibits, targeting school children through a $1.75 million grant from the National Science Foundation. The first phase of construction is now underway for a new 12-acre Chinese garden, the largest outside of China.
The Huntingtons art collections are specialized in character, focusing on 18th century British and French art, and on American art ranging from the early 18th to the early 20th century. Other objects of the same period round out the collection including French paintings, French and British sculpture, tapestries, furniture, porcelain, and silver, and British drawings and watercolors. The collections have continued to grow, both by gift and purchase, particularly in the area of American art. Temporary art exhibitions include shows derived substantially from The Huntingtons collections, as well as traveling exhibits from other museums throughout the United States and abroad. The Huntington is world-renowned as home to Gainsboroughs The Blue Boy and Lawrences Pinkie.
Hours
Summer Hours (May 29 thru Sept. 2)
Tuesday-Sunday: 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
After Sept. 2
Tues.- Fri.: Noon - 4:30 p.m.
Sat.- Sun.: 10:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Closed Mondays and the following holidays:
Christmas Eve Day, Christmas Day, New Year's Day, Memorial Day,
Independence Day (July 4), Labor Day, Thanksgiving.
Open Easter Sunday.
Admission
No reservations are necessary to visit The Huntington. Tickets may be purchased at the time of your visit.
Members: FREE Become a member now
Non-members
$15 Adults
$12 Seniors (age 65+)
$10 Students (age 12-18 or with full-time student I.D.)
$6 Youth (age 5-11)
Free for children under 5.
Groups of 15 or more: $11 per person
Admission is free to all visitors on the first Thursday of every month. Please note, that beginning Sept. 6, 2007, all non-member visitors to The Huntington on Free Day must have a ticket. More information...
Parking
Parking is free at The Huntington, and no reservations are necessary unless arriving by bus.
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