TAKINOMIYA COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Niihama, Ehime, JP
Designed by Shunsuke Kato
Takinomiya Country Club's Besshi course sits in Niihama, a city on the northern coast of Shikoku in Ehime Prefecture. The course was designed by Shunsuke Kato, a Japanese architect whose work reflects the mid-to-late twentieth-century development of golf in Japan's regional centers. Niihama developed historically as a mining and industrial city, and the surrounding landscape features mountainous terrain characteristic of Shikoku's interior, where courses often occupy valleys and hillsides carved from forested land.
The routing likely follows the natural topography of the site, with elevation changes and wooded corridors typical of Japanese courses built in mountainous regions. Designers working in such terrain generally emphasize strategic use of slopes and incorporate the existing landscape rather than extensive earthmoving. The course serves members from the local area and the broader Ehime region, where golf facilities provide recreational amenities in a part of Japan less densely developed than the major metropolitan corridors.
Takinomiya Country Club operates within the traditional Japanese golf club model, where membership and guest access follow established protocols. The club likely offers dining and social facilities that reflect regional culinary traditions alongside the golf experience. Courses in this part of Shikoku provide access to the game in a setting removed from urban centers, where the pace and character of play differ from the more heavily trafficked facilities near Tokyo, Osaka, or Nagoya.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Besshi was designed by Shunsuke Kato.
Yes. Besshi at Takinomiya Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Besshi is 36.
Besshi is a 9-hole course.