I’m not sure I realized it during my visit in March 2013, but the Sunken Gardens in Brackenridge Park in San Antonio had been restored only about 10 years earlier, by a public-private partnership. Nice work.
The Sunken Gardens is another one of those places I’ve visited across the decades with a shifting array of companions: my grandmother, first of all, but also every one of my immediate family, cousins, high school friends, visiting girlfriends, other out-of-town visitors, my fiancé-then-wife, my children. It’s a personal favorite of a place.
It isn’t authentic in the sense that Japanese garden designers created it. Rather, the city parks department created it from an abandoned quarry in the 1910s, probably after consulting photographs and maybe other sources on Japanese gardens, but I don’t know that. Maybe the department just winged it.
It is authentic San Antonio: an interpretation of a Japanese garden that whatever the inspiration, is inspired.
The main pavilion, an impressive bit of rock laying.
Ah, Texas in March. Spring green, ahead of summer brown.
Been 10 years. I ought to go back if I can, but I’ve accumulated a lot of personal favorite places over the years.