HARUNANOMORI COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Takasaki, Gunma, JP
Designed by Jack Nicklaus
Harunanomori Country Club sits in the hills near Takasaki in Gunma Prefecture, roughly two hours northwest of Tokyo. The course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and represents one of his Japanese projects from an era when American architects were frequently commissioned to create championship layouts in the country. The property occupies forested terrain in the shadow of Mount Haruna, one of the region's prominent volcanic peaks, and the routing takes advantage of the natural elevation changes and wooded corridors characteristic of this part of central Honshu.
The design reflects Nicklaus's signature emphasis on strategic shot-making and well-defended greens. Players encounter a variety of hole types that require careful club selection and course management, with doglegs, elevation shifts, and bunkering that rewards precision over distance. The surrounding forest frames many holes and defines playing corridors, while views toward the mountains provide context for the layout's setting within Gunma's recreational landscape.
Harunanomori serves a membership drawn largely from the Tokyo metropolitan area and the northern Kanto region. Like many Japanese country clubs of its generation, it functions as both a golf venue and a social retreat, with clubhouse facilities that accommodate dining and corporate gatherings. The course remains a regional fixture for golfers seeking a Nicklaus design within reasonable reach of the capital.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Harunanomori was designed by Jack Nicklaus.
Yes. Harunanomori at Harunanomori Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Harunanomori is 72.
Harunanomori plays 7,054 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
Harunanomori is a 18-hole course.