TAKINOMIYA COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Niihama, Ehime, JP
Designed by Shunsuke Kato
Takinomiya Country Club's Akaishi-Besshi course sits in Niihama, a city on the northern coast of Shikoku in Ehime Prefecture. The region is characterized by mountainous terrain descending toward the Seto Inland Sea, and courses here typically work with significant elevation changes and forested hillsides. Shunsuke Kato, the architect, designed numerous courses across Japan during the country's golf expansion in the latter decades of the twentieth century, often adapting layouts to challenging topography.
The course name references Akaishi and Besshi, likely drawing from local geographic or historical features—Besshi is known in the area for its copper mining heritage. The routing presumably navigates slopes and valleys typical of Shikoku's interior landscapes, where designers must balance playability with the natural contours of the land. Holes likely move through wooded corridors with views opening periodically toward surrounding peaks or coastal plains.
Takinomiya serves golfers in the Niihama area and visitors exploring Shikoku's golf offerings. The club operates within Japan's country club tradition, where membership structures and course maintenance standards reflect the domestic golf culture that developed through the postwar era. The course provides a regional option for play in Ehime, a prefecture less internationally recognized for golf than areas like Hyogo or Chiba but home to several layouts shaped by Japan's mountainous geography.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Akaishi-Besshi was designed by Shunsuke Kato.
Yes. Akaishi-Besshi at Takinomiya Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Akaishi-Besshi is 72.
Akaishi-Besshi is a 18-hole course.