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Kyoto’s classic city park at the foot of Higashiyama
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Park

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Waldir Nunez

What it is: Kyoto’s classic city park at the foot of Higashiyama—famous for its centerpiece weeping cherry tree, lantern-lit spring hanami parties, and shaded paths that connect Yasaka Shrine with nearby temples and the old streets of Gion.

What to expect

Slip through the back of Yasaka Shrine and the city softens into ponds, footbridges, and curving paths under maples and pines. In spring, food stalls line the walks and blue tarps bloom across the lawns as friends meet for hanami; after dark, lanterns click on and the great weeping cherry becomes a pale pink chandelier. Summer trades petals for cicadas and cool shade; you’ll hear water over stones and the clink of teacups from small cafés. Come autumn and the maples set the ridgeline aflame—reds and golds reflected in the ponds—while winter pares the scene down to lines and quiet, with frost sharpening the bridges at dawn. The park isn’t huge, which is the charm: you can loop it slowly in under an hour, pause on a bench, and decide whether to drift toward Chion-in, Shōren-in, Kōdai-ji, or back into Gion’s townhouses for tea.

Why it’s worth it

Maruyama Park gives you Kyoto’s seasons in one easy frame. It’s where shrine lanterns, garden ponds, and neighborhood life overlap: a grandmother unrolling a picnic cloth under blossoms, a wedding couple crossing a bridge for photos, kids chasing carp ripples while temple bells roll across the trees. You don’t need a plan to enjoy it—just wander—and yet it anchors a perfect day: shrine → park → temple or old street, all within a few calm blocks. If you’re here in sakura season, the evening illumination around the weeping cherry is one of those “only-in-Kyoto” moments; if not, the park still reads beautifully in rain, when stone and bark go glossy and reflections double the color.

Basics

  • Where: Higashiyama, directly behind Yasaka Shrine; a short walk from Gion-Shijō (Keihan) or Higashiyama (Tōzai Line)

  • Time needed: 30–90 minutes for a loop, photos, and a sit on the benches

  • Best seasons: Late Mar–early Apr for cherry blossoms (night illumination); mid–late Nov for autumn color

  • Good pairings: Yasaka Shrine, Chion-in, Shōren-in, Kōdai-ji, Nene-no-michi, Gion streets

Bottom line: blossoms, ponds, and lanterns stitched to a shrine—Maruyama Park is the easy, beautiful pause that makes a Higashiyama day feel complete. Come early for calm, return at night for glow, and let the season tell the story. 🌸

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