GOLF CLUB SEVEN LAKES
🇯🇵 Oomiya, Ibaraki, JP
Designed by Shunsuke Kato
Golf Club Seven Lakes' Lake-Sky course occupies terrain in Oomiya, a town in Ibaraki Prefecture northeast of Tokyo. Designed by Shunsuke Kato, the course reflects the regional approach to golf architecture common in Japan's inland prefectures, where designers work with rolling or hilly topography and incorporate water features into the routing. The "Seven Lakes" name suggests the property's defining characteristic, with multiple ponds and lakes influencing play across the layout.
Kato's design likely emphasizes strategic positioning off the tee and approach accuracy, as water hazards and elevation changes require careful club selection and course management. The Lake-Sky routing presumably takes advantage of the natural contours and water elements to create variety in hole character, with some holes playing along or across bodies of water while others move through higher ground. The course serves members and guests in a region where golf remains a popular recreational pursuit, with facilities that typically include practice areas and clubhouse amenities standard to Japanese private clubs.
Ibaraki Prefecture contains numerous golf courses developed during Japan's golf boom periods, and Golf Club Seven Lakes fits within this broader landscape of courses serving the Tokyo metropolitan area's golfing population. The property provides a day's round in a setting removed from urban density, where the interplay of water and terrain creates the routing's character and challenge.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Lake-Sky was designed by Shunsuke Kato.
Yes. Lake-Sky at Golf Club Seven Lakes is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Lake-Sky is 72.
Lake-Sky plays 6,490 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
Lake-Sky is a 18-hole course.