Golf Le Mirage's Carolina course occupies rolling terrain in Terrebonne, a suburban municipality northeast of Montreal along the Mille Îles River. Designed by Graham Cooke, a Canadian architect active primarily in Quebec and Ontario during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, the layout reflects the regional approach to golf course development during a period of expansion in the province's golf infrastructure. The property features the mix of hardwood and conifer forest typical of the Laurentian region, with elevation changes that provide variety in stance and shot requirements.
The routing takes advantage of the natural topography, moving through wooded corridors and more open areas where views extend across the surrounding landscape. Water features appear on several holes, contributing both strategic interest and visual definition to the design. The course serves a membership drawn from the greater Montreal area, part of the network of semi-private and private facilities that developed as the city's northern suburbs grew during the latter decades of the twentieth century.
Golf Le Mirage operates as a club offering both golf and other recreational amenities, a common model in Quebec where seasonal climate encourages multi-use facilities. The Carolina course represents one component of the property's golf offerings, designed to accommodate a range of player abilities while providing a woodland golf experience characteristic of courses built on former agricultural or forested land in the region.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Carolina was designed by Graham Cooke.
Carolina at Golf Le Mirage is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Carolina is 72.
Carolina plays 6,805 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Carolina is 137.
Carolina is a 18-hole course.