MIZUNAMI COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Mizunami, Gifu, JP
Designed by Taizo Kawata
Mizunami Country Club occupies terrain in the Gifu Prefecture city of Mizunami, located in the Tōnō region of central Japan. The course was designed by Taizo Kawata, a Japanese architect active during the mid-to-late twentieth century when golf development expanded significantly across the country. Mizunami itself sits in a hilly, forested area known historically for its ceramics industry, and courses in this part of Gifu typically work with rolling topography and wooded corridors that define playing corridors and frame views.
Kawata's design reflects the conventions of Japanese golf architecture from its era, likely incorporating elevation changes and strategic bunkering suited to the natural contours of the site. Courses in this region often feature narrow fairways bordered by pine and other native trees, with greens that take advantage of slope and drainage patterns inherent to the landscape. The routing would have been shaped by the available land and the need to create variety across eighteen holes within the constraints of the terrain.
Mizunami Country Club serves the local golfing community in Gifu and neighboring prefectures, part of the network of member clubs that developed across Japan during the sport's growth period. The club provides a setting for recreational play in a region where golf remains a popular pastime, offering a course that reflects both the design sensibilities of its time and the distinctive landscape character of central Japan.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Mizunami was designed by Taizo Kawata.
Yes. Mizunami at Mizunami Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Mizunami is 72.
Mizunami plays 6,891 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
Mizunami is a 18-hole course.