1 Best Sight in Nagoya, Ise-Shima, and the Kii Peninsula, Japan

Noritake Garden

Nishi-ku

Delicate colors and intricate hand-painted designs characterize the china of Noritake, one of the world's largest manufacturers of porcelain. Its garden complex includes a craft center—effectively a mini-factory where workers demonstrate the 15-step manufacturing process from modeling to glazing to hand painting. You can even paint a design and transfer it to a piece of china, or decorate a porcelain dinosaur. China-painting workshops run from 10 to 4, but the cost does not include the price of shipping your piece once it has been fired (only plates can be shipped overseas). The upper floors house a small museum displaying "Old Noritake" works with art nouveau and art deco influences. A free Welcome Center shows the diverse industrial applications of ceramics, from circuit boards to racing helmets. There's the odd bargain to be found in the outlet section of the company shop. Noritake Garden is a 15-minute walk north of JR Nagoya Station or five minutes from exit 2 of the Kamejima subway station, and can easily be combined with a trip to the nearby Toyota Commemorative Museum.

3--1--36 Noritake-Shinmachi, Nagoya, Aichi-ken, 451-8501, Japan
052-561–7114
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Garden free; ¥500 Craft Center; ¥800 including Toyota Commemorative Museum; ¥2,000 to ¥3,500 china-painting workshops, Closed Mon.