CARDIFF GOLF CLUB
🏴 Cyncoed, Cardiff, Wales
Designed by Robert Walker
Cardiff Golf Club occupies elevated parkland in the Cyncoed district north of the city center, where the course commands views across Cardiff and the Bristol Channel toward the Somerset coast. Designed by Robert Walker and opened in 1922, the layout makes deliberate use of the site's natural contours, with several holes playing along ridgelines and others descending into wooded valleys. The routing takes advantage of mature trees—predominantly oak, beech, and ash—that frame fairways and define strategy without overwhelming the playing corridors.
The course measures just over 6,000 yards from the back tees, a length that places emphasis on accuracy and course management rather than raw distance. Walker's design features subtle green complexes that reward precise approach play, and the bunkering, though not extensive, is positioned to penalize wayward shots at critical moments. The opening and closing stretches include several holes with pronounced elevation change, while the middle section moves through more level ground bordered by woodland.
Cardiff Golf Club has served as a venue for Welsh national championships and regional amateur competitions over the decades. The club maintains a traditional members' culture, with a clubhouse that reflects its interwar origins. The course remains a fixture in Welsh golf, offering a straightforward parkland test that has changed modestly since Walker's original design while retaining its essential character and strategic interest.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Cardiff was designed by Robert Walker.
Yes. Cardiff at Cardiff Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Cardiff is 70.
Cardiff plays 6,150 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Cardiff is 137.
Cardiff is a 18-hole course.