GOLFCLUB SCHLOSS LIEBENSTEIN
🇩🇪 Neckarwestheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, DE
Designed by Donald Harradine
Golfclub Schloss Liebenstein's Gelb course sits in the Neckar valley of Baden-Württemberg, near the town of Neckarwestheim between Stuttgart and Heilbronn. The club takes its name from the nearby Schloss Liebenstein, a castle that provides historical context to the wooded, rolling terrain characteristic of this part of southwestern Germany. Donald Harradine, the prolific Swiss-based architect who designed more than a hundred courses across continental Europe in the mid-to-late twentieth century, laid out the course during an era when he was establishing golf in regions with limited prior exposure to the game.
Harradine's work typically emphasized playability for developing golf markets while respecting natural landforms, and the Gelb course reflects this approach with routing that moves through mixed woodland and open agricultural land. The terrain offers moderate elevation change, and the design incorporates the native trees and natural drainage patterns common to the Neckar region. As one of multiple courses at the facility, the Gelb layout serves as part of a broader club offering in an area where golf expanded significantly during the latter decades of the twentieth century.
The club operates within the traditional German golf structure, where membership and guest access follow established European conventions. The setting near the Neckar River and within reach of Stuttgart's metropolitan area places it in a landscape where viticulture and forested hills define the regional character.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Gelb was designed by Donald Harradine.
Yes. Gelb at Golfclub Schloss Liebenstein is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Gelb is 36.
Gelb plays 3,118 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Gelb is 135.
Gelb is a 9-hole course.