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Shoutou-an

Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world

“In an often, frenetic Japan, it is still possible to find quiet places for contemplation. Water trickles gently in the still warm air”.

Andrea and Peter Hylands

June 17, 2023
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The building was moved to Kanazawa in 1979 when it was renamed Shoutou-an.

It is late October and the leaves in Kanazawa streets and parks are now changing to their autumnal red. An occasional leaf detaches itself in the soft breeze and drifts gently downward.

In Kanazawa, the teahouse Shoutou-an, is one of those places of contemplation, with its traditional and small garden.

Described in the Japanese style as a cottage with the sound of the breeze of pinewoods and ocean waves the house was built in the nineteenth century as the living room of a historic house, Fuyu-en, in Tokyo. The structure was moved to Kamakura in 1936 when it was renovated as an independent tearoom by Maeda Toshinari, the sixteenth head of the Maeda family.

The building was moved to Kanazawa in 1979 when it was renamed Shoutou-an.

The building was acquired by the City of Kanazawa in 2001. In 2005 the building was extensively restored using highly skilled craftsmen and this work included a newly tiled floor and the tables and chairs now used in tea ceremonies were also added at that time.

It is late October and the leaves in Kanazawa streets and parks are now changing to their autumnal red. An occasional leaf detaches itself in the soft breeze and drifts gently downward.

In Kanazawa, the teahouse Shoutou-an, is one of those places of contemplation, with its traditional and small garden.

Described in the Japanese style as a cottage with the sound of the breeze of pinewoods and ocean waves the house was built in the nineteenth century as the living room of a historic house, Fuyu-en, in Tokyo. The structure was moved to Kamakura in 1936 when it was renovated as an independent tearoom by Maeda Toshinari, the sixteenth head of the Maeda family.

The building was moved to Kanazawa in 1979 when it was renamed Shoutou-an.

The building was acquired by the City of Kanazawa in 2001. In 2005 the building was extensively restored using highly skilled craftsmen and this work included a newly tiled floor and the tables and chairs now used in tea ceremonies were also added at that time.

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