TURTLE ACE GOLF CLUB
🇯🇵 Kameyama, Mie, JP
Designed by Kozasa Shozo
Turtle Ace Golf Club occupies terrain in Kameyama, a city in Mie Prefecture situated in the Kansai region of central Japan, roughly midway between Nagoya and Osaka along historical travel routes. The course was designed by Kozasa Shozo, a Japanese architect active during the country's golf course development boom in the latter decades of the twentieth century. Kameyama's landscape features rolling hills and forested areas characteristic of inland Mie, providing natural elevation changes and wooded corridors that typically define the routing and playing character of courses in this region.
The design likely reflects the conventions of Japanese golf architecture from its era, which often incorporated strategic bunkering, undulating greens, and thoughtful use of the natural topography to create variety across the eighteen holes. Courses in this part of Japan generally navigate through pine and mixed forest, with fairways carved from the hillsides and greens positioned to take advantage of natural plateaus and slopes. Water features, whether ponds or streams, frequently appear as both hazards and aesthetic elements.
Turtle Ace serves as a private club facility, typical of many Japanese golf clubs that emphasize member play and maintain traditional clubhouse amenities. The Kameyama area, while not a major tourist destination for golf, hosts several courses that cater primarily to regional membership and visiting players from nearby urban centers. The course operates within the broader context of Japanese golf culture, where attention to course conditioning and service standards remains consistently high.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Turtle Ace was designed by Kozasa Shozo.
Yes. Turtle Ace at Turtle Ace Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Turtle Ace is 72.
Turtle Ace is a 18-hole course.