PARK HILLS COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Altoona, PA, USA
Designed by James Harrison
Park Hills Country Club sits in the rolling terrain outside Altoona, Pennsylvania, a city known for its position in the Allegheny Mountains and its railroad heritage. The course was designed by James Harrison, a regional architect active in the early-to-mid twentieth century who worked primarily in Pennsylvania and neighboring states. Harrison's designs typically made use of natural land movement and incorporated strategic bunkering suited to the era's equipment and playing styles.
The layout at Park Hills takes advantage of the area's elevation changes and wooded corridors, characteristics common to courses built in this part of central Pennsylvania. The routing likely moves through a mix of open and tree-lined holes, with greens that reflect the ground's natural contours. Courses of this vintage in the region often feature modest but thoughtful green complexes and fairways that reward positioning over pure distance.
Park Hills serves as a traditional private club for the Altoona community, offering a home course for local members and hosting regional amateur competitions typical of clubs in smaller Pennsylvania cities. The club provides a setting where golf fits into the social and recreational fabric of the area, with a clubhouse and amenities that support member play and gatherings. The course remains a product of its time and place, shaped by the landscape Harrison encountered and the needs of golfers in this part of the state.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Park Hills was designed by James Harrison.
Yes. Park Hills at Park Hills Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Park Hills is 70.
Park Hills plays 6,031 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Park Hills is 126.
Park Hills is a 18-hole course.