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  1. Japanese American Community and Cultural Center. Developed between 1978 and 1983 and featuring a multi-level brick plaza designed by Isamu Noguchi, the complex stands out for its understated monumentality and simple beauty. Address. 244 S. San Pedro St. Los Angeles, CA 90013. Get directions. Architects. Kazumi Adachi, Kiyoshi Sawano,

  2. The Japanese American Cultural & Community Center weaves Japanese and Japanese American arts and culture into the fabric of our communities. JACCC remains firmly rooted in Little Tokyo, providing a vital place to build connections between people and cultures, locally and internationally.

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  3. Specialties: Founded in 1971, the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center is one of the largest ethnic arts and cultural centers of its kind in the United States. The mission of the JACCC is to present, perpetuate, transmit and promote Japanese and Japanese American arts and culture to diverse audiences, and to provide a center to enhance community programs. The Japanese American ...

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    • 34.047780
    • (213) 628-2725
    • 118.241911
  4. Listen to Japanese ambient, new age, and experimental music from Music Interior, Haruomi Hosono, Toshifumi Hinata, Hiroshi Yoshimura, and mo...

    • Tortoise General Store
    • Kazu Sushi
    • Sawtelle Boulevard
    • Nobu Ryokan Malibu
    • Storrier Stearns Japanese Garden
    • Japanese Village

    If you've got shopping on the brain while you're in L.A., plan on budgeting at least an hour or two at Tortoise General Store. The shop, located on a quiet stretch of Venice Boulevard, is heaven for design lovers: You'll get hypnotized just browsing the immaculate, hyper-curated shelves. Founded by husband and wife Taku and Keiko Shinomoto, Tortois...

    This off-the-beaten-path restaurant, tucked between a nail salon and pet clinic in a strip mall in Studio City, isn't flashy. Celebrities don't come here to get photographed on their way out the door. And you won't find much in the way of ambience (the bar has just 10 seats). But owner and chef Kazuharu Sogabe's omakase-style menu (from $110 per pe...

    Located near Santa Monica, this four-block strip has been a hub for Japanese-owned businesses since the early 1900s, and was even renamed Sawtelle Japantown in 2015. Today, the mix of restaurants has grown to include a wider array of Asian specialties, so in addition to udon and nigiri, you'll also find a Filipino dessert bar, Taiwanese haute cuisi...

    The closest you'll come to sleeping in Japan — without actually flying the 13 hours to get there — is an overnight stay at Nobu Ryokan Malibu. The intimate, exclusive 16-room hotel is designed to look and feel just like a traditional Japanese ryokan, or inn. Upon arrival, you'll be welcomed with a steaming pot of green tea and matcha cake. The prop...

    One of Pasadena's most underrated attractions, this masterpiece of a gardendates back to 1935 and is hidden behind a private residence on Arlington Drive. It's the work of Kinzuchi Fujii, a Japanese landscaper who immigrated to California in 1903. Fujii was obsessed with the idea of creating a "real, uncompromising Japanese garden in the U.S." and ...

    You haven't gotten to know L.A.'s Japanese heritage without strolling the five-block stretch in downtown known as Little Tokyo. One of just three historic Japantowns remaining in the U.S. (all of them in California), Little Tokyo is not only one of the city's oldest neighborhoods, it also marks the spot where the first community of Japanese immigra...

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  5. Kozue Matsumoto, koto, and Rachel Rudich, shakuhachi, meld their love of traditional Japanese music with their expertise in contemporary and experimental forms. Their fusion of traditional, modern, and improvisational music creates an incredibly vibrant and exciting showcase for Japanese culture through music. https://kotosounds.com/hanahibikiduo

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  7. Dec 7, 2021 · Before Pearl Harbor, L.A. was home to thriving Japanese communities. Here’s what they were like. An image provided by the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles shows the 1938...

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