TSUKIGASE COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Soraku, Kyoto, JP
Designed by J. E. Crane
Tsukigase Country Club sits in the Soraku district of Kyoto Prefecture, a region characterized by rolling hills and forested valleys in the Kansai area of Japan. The course was designed by J. E. Crane, an architect who worked on several Japanese layouts during the country's golf development boom in the latter half of the twentieth century. The routing takes advantage of the natural topography common to this part of Kyoto, where elevation changes and wooded corridors shape the playing experience.
The course reflects the design principles typical of its era, when Japanese courses often incorporated dramatic terrain into their layouts. Players encounter holes that move through valleys and climb hillsides, with the surrounding forest framing many fairways. The setting provides seasonal variation, particularly during spring cherry blossom season and autumn foliage periods that are characteristic of the Kyoto region.
Tsukigase serves primarily a membership drawn from the greater Kyoto and Osaka metropolitan areas. Like many Japanese country clubs of its generation, it functions as both a golf venue and a social retreat from urban centers. The club maintains the formal traditions common to Japanese golf culture, including attention to course conditioning and pace of play protocols that reflect the country's distinctive approach to the game.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Tsukigase was designed by J. E. Crane.
Yes. Tsukigase at Tsukigase Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Tsukigase is 72.
Tsukigase is a 18-hole course.