GOLF CLUB OBERBERG
🇩🇪 Reichshof, North Rhine-Westphalia, DE
Designed by Karl F. Grohs
Golf Club Oberberg's 18 Loch course sits in the hilly terrain of the Bergisches Land region, roughly an hour east of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia. Designed by Karl F. Grohs, a German architect active in the latter decades of the twentieth century, the layout takes advantage of the area's natural elevation changes and forested landscape. The course occupies land characteristic of this part of western Germany, where rolling hills and mixed woodlands create corridors for golf holes that move through varied topography.
The routing works with the natural contours rather than imposing dramatic earthwork, a common approach in German parkland designs of this era. Players encounter elevation shifts that affect club selection and provide views across the surrounding countryside. The tree-lined fairways and the region's temperate climate contribute to playing conditions that change noticeably with the seasons.
Golf Club Oberberg serves the local and regional golfing community in an area where the sport has grown steadily since the mid-twentieth century. The club operates in a region known more for its rural character and small towns than for major urban centers, and the course reflects that setting. While not a tournament venue of national prominence, it represents the type of members' club that forms the backbone of German golf, offering a full eighteen-hole layout in a landscape well-suited to the game.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
18 Loch was designed by Karl F. Grohs.
Yes. 18 Loch at Golf Club Oberberg is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at 18 Loch is 73.
18 Loch plays 6,245 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
18 Loch is a 18-hole course.