GOLF CLUB AM ALTEN FLIESS
🇩🇪 Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia, DE
Designed by Kurt Rossknecht
Golf Club Am Alten Fliess Rot-Weiss occupies parkland terrain in Bergheim, a town situated in the Rhineland region between Cologne and Aachen. The course was designed by Kurt Rossknecht, a German architect active in the mid-to-late twentieth century who contributed to the development of golf infrastructure in North Rhine-Westphalia during the sport's postwar expansion in Germany. The layout reflects the parkland tradition common to courses built in this era across the Rhine valley, where relatively flat or gently rolling agricultural land was converted to golf use with tree planting and water features integrated into the design.
The routing takes advantage of the site's mature vegetation and the presence of the Fliess, a small watercourse that gives the club its name. Holes incorporate these natural elements along with strategic bunkering typical of continental European parkland designs from this period. The course serves a regional membership and provides a setting characteristic of clubs established during Germany's golf development in the latter half of the twentieth century.
Bergheim lies within the Cologne lowland, an area marked by open agricultural landscapes and scattered woodlands. The club operates in a region where golf has grown steadily since the postwar decades, with courses serving both local communities and visitors exploring the Rhineland's recreational offerings.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Rot-Weiss was designed by Kurt Rossknecht.
Yes. Rot-Weiss at Golf Club Am Alten Fliess is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Rot-Weiss is 72.
Rot-Weiss plays 6,433 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Rot-Weiss is 131.
Rot-Weiss is a 18-hole course.