WESTWOODS GOLF CLUB
🇺🇸 Farmington, CT, USA
Designed by Geoffrey Cornish
Westwoods Golf Club sits in Farmington, Connecticut, a town in the Hartford metropolitan area known for its rolling terrain and New England woodland character. The course was designed by Geoffrey Cornish, the Massachusetts-based architect who shaped more than 200 courses across the northeastern United States and eastern Canada during a career spanning several decades. Cornish, who studied under Stanley Thompson and later partnered with William Robinson, became known for practical, playable designs that worked within natural landforms and budgets accessible to public and semi-private facilities.
The layout at Westwoods reflects Cornish's characteristic approach: routing that follows the existing topography without excessive earthmoving, tree-lined fairways that define playing corridors, and greens that offer subtle contours rather than severe undulation. The property's natural elevation changes provide variety in hole character, with some holes playing uphill or downhill and others occupying flatter ground. Water features and bunkers are positioned to challenge approach shots and frame landing areas without dominating play.
Westwoods serves the greater Hartford golfing community as a semi-private facility, offering memberships alongside public access. The course provides a straightforward test of golf in a wooded New England setting, typical of the region's mid-century designs that prioritize playability and maintenance practicality over dramatic architectural statements.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Westwoods was designed by Geoffrey Cornish.
Yes. Westwoods at Westwoods Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Westwoods is 61.
Westwoods plays 4,407 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Westwoods is 91.
Westwoods is a 18-hole course.