Avalon Links' North Course sits in Burlington, Washington, a small city in the Skagit Valley roughly midway between Seattle and the Canadian border. Designed by Robert Muir Graves and opened in the mid-1990s, the course occupies relatively flat farmland characteristic of the valley floor, with views toward the Cascade Range to the east and the Olympic Mountains to the west. Graves, a prolific California-based architect who worked extensively throughout the western United States, created a layout that incorporates water features and mature tree plantings to define holes across terrain that offers limited natural elevation change.
The routing makes use of ponds, creeks, and wetland areas that are common in this low-lying agricultural region, bringing water into play on several holes. The course serves as part of a larger Avalon Golf Club property that includes a second eighteen-hole layout, providing public golf access in a part of northwestern Washington where farmland and residential development dominate the landscape. The design reflects Graves' straightforward approach to golf architecture, emphasizing playability and strategic variety within the constraints of the site's topography.
Burlington's location in the fertile Skagit Valley places the course in a setting known more for tulip fields and produce farming than for golf, and the North Course offers a parkland-style experience shaped by the region's flat terrain and maritime climate. The layout provides a standard test for recreational golfers in Skagit County and the surrounding area.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
North was designed by Robert Muir Graves.
Yes. North at Avalon Links is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at North is 36.
North plays 3,462 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at North is 128.
North is a 9-hole course.