TOYAMA COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Asaminami, Hiroshima, JP
Designed by Taizo Kawata
Toyama Country Club sits in the Asaminami ward of Hiroshima, a region characterized by rolling terrain and forested hillsides typical of western Honshu. The course was designed by Taizo Kawata, a Japanese architect active in the mid-to-late twentieth century who contributed to the development of golf in the country during its postwar expansion. Kawata's work generally reflects the adaptation of golf design principles to Japan's mountainous topography, and Toyama follows this pattern with routing that moves through varied elevation changes and natural contours.
The layout takes advantage of the site's natural features, with holes routed along ridgelines and through valleys framed by mature trees. Players encounter approach shots that require attention to elevation and green complexes shaped by the underlying landforms. The course serves a regional membership and reflects the club culture common to Japanese country clubs of its era, where golf is part of broader social and business traditions.
Toyama Country Club operates within the context of Hiroshima's golfing community, offering a setting where the game is played amid the prefecture's characteristic landscape. The course provides a straightforward test suited to members and visitors familiar with the demands of Japanese mountain golf, where accuracy and course management often take precedence over distance.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Toyama was designed by Taizo Kawata.
Yes. Toyama at Toyama Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Toyama is 72.
Toyama is a 18-hole course.