DAI-ATAMI KOKUSAI GOLF CLUB
🇯🇵 Izunokuni, Shizuoka, JP
Designed by J. E. Crane
Dai-Atami Kokusai Golf Club's Ohito course occupies terrain in Izunokuni, a city in eastern Shizuoka Prefecture on Japan's Izu Peninsula. The region sits inland from the coastal resort areas of Atami and Ito, characterized by volcanic topography and forested hillsides typical of this part of the peninsula. J. E. Crane designed the course during an era when American architects were active in Japanese golf development, bringing routing principles adapted to the country's often dramatic and constrained terrain.
The layout works through elevation changes and natural contours that define play on the Izu Peninsula, where flat land is scarce and designers must incorporate slopes and directional shifts into their strategies. Courses in this region typically feature holes that move through wooded corridors and offer views toward surrounding mountains or, on clear days, glimpses of Mount Fuji to the northwest. The volcanic soils and microclimates of the area support dense vegetation that frames fairways and defines the visual character of play.
Dai-Atami Kokusai serves members and visitors in a region known for hot springs and resort tourism, where golf has long been part of the recreational landscape. The club operates within the traditions of Japanese golf hospitality, where attention to course conditioning and service standards reflects broader cultural expectations. The Ohito course provides a representative example of mid-century design adapted to challenging terrain in one of Japan's established golf regions.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Ohito was designed by J. E. Crane.
Yes. Ohito at Dai-Atami Kokusai Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Ohito is 72.
Ohito plays 6,861 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
Ohito is a 18-hole course.