HASHIMOTO COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Hashimoto, Wakayama, JP
Designed by Osamu Ueda
Hashimoto Country Club sits in the mountainous terrain of Wakayama Prefecture, approximately 50 kilometers southeast of Osaka. The club features two eighteen-hole courses—the West and East—both designed by Osamu Ueda, a Japanese architect active during the country's golf course construction boom in the latter decades of the twentieth century. The courses occupy rolling, forested land characteristic of the Kii Peninsula's interior, where elevation changes and natural contours shape the routing and playing experience.
The West and East courses navigate terrain that requires strategic positioning and club selection on approach shots, with greens often elevated or set into hillsides. Ueda's design work typically emphasized playability for a range of skill levels while incorporating the natural topography rather than extensive earthmoving. Fairways move through stands of pine and other native vegetation, and water features appear on select holes as both hazards and visual elements.
Hashimoto Country Club serves primarily as a member facility, drawing golfers from the Osaka-Kobe metropolitan area who seek a retreat in a more rural setting. The club follows traditional Japanese golf club conventions, including attention to course conditioning, pace of play, and dining service. The courses remain relatively unknown outside the region but represent the standard of mid-tier private club golf that developed across Japan during periods of economic growth and expanded interest in the game.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
West/East was designed by Osamu Ueda.
Yes. West/East at Hashimoto Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at West/East is 72.
West/East is a 18-hole course.