Harmony Club in Timnath, Colorado, features a course designed by Jim Engh, the architect known for his dramatic use of natural terrain and bold visual presentations at courses like Fossil Trace and Sanctuary. The layout occupies land northeast of Fort Collins in the northern Colorado Front Range, where the high plains meet the foothills of the Rockies. The setting provides views westward toward the mountains while the routing works across rolling prairie terrain characteristic of this transitional zone between flatlands and higher elevations.
Engh's design approach typically emphasizes strategic variety and memorable hole corridors shaped by the existing landforms. At Harmony, the course incorporates elevation changes and natural contours into a routing that asks players to navigate both visual drama and practical shot-making decisions. The architect's preference for distinct bunkering styles and green complexes that reward precision appears throughout the layout, with holes that often present clear risk-reward options from multiple tee positions.
The Harmony Club operates as a private facility serving the northern Colorado region, part of the residential and recreational development in Timnath, a town that has grown significantly in recent years along the Interstate 25 corridor. The course reflects the modern era of Colorado golf design, where architects work to create championship-caliber layouts that accommodate the climate and playing conditions of the high plains—firm turf, persistent wind, and the ball-flight effects of elevation above 5,000 feet.
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FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Harmony was designed by Jim Engh.
Harmony at Harmony Club is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Harmony is 72.
Harmony plays 7,323 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Harmony is 144.
Harmony is a 18-hole course.