
This fall, join SAH/SCC for a behind-the-scenes tour of the reconstructed 320-year-old magistrate’s (shoya) house from Marugame, Japan, at the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. The Japanese Heritage Shoya House—a 3,000-square-foot residence built around 1700—served as the center of village life.
Los Angeles residents Yohko and Akira Yokoi offered their historic family home to The Huntington in 2016. Huntington representatives made numerous visits to the structure in Marugame and participated in study sessions with architects in Japan before developing a strategy for moving the house and outbuildings to Southern California. Since 2019, artisans from Japan have been working alongside local experts to assemble the structures and re-create the traditional wood- and stonework features, prioritizing the traditions of Japanese carpentry, craft, and sensitivity to materials.
At The Huntington, visitors will be able to view the house from the interior and walk around a re-created period compound that includes a residential garden with a pond. The two-acre site includes a new gatehouse entryway based on the original, as well as landscape elements that closely resemble the house’s original garden.
Our group will be joined by Robert Hori, the Gardens Cultural Curator and Program Director at The Huntington, who will share the history and inside story of the reconstruction of the house.
Tickets include full access to The Huntington to enjoy the grounds, visit various exhibitions at the library and galleries, and dine at the restaurants (Rose Garden Tea Room reservations are strongly recommended).
