Royal Canberra Golf Club

Entrance to the RCGC in 2005
Club information
Coordinates 35°18′14″S 149°05′24″E / 35.304°S 149.09°E / -35.304; 149.09
Location Bentham St
Yarralumla 2600
Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Established 1926
Total holes 27
Tournaments hosted Women's Australian Open (2013)
Length 5,891 m (6,442 yd)

The Canberra Golf Club, later known as the Royal Canberra Golf Club, was formed in 1926. Its original grounds were behind the Hotel Canberra on the river flats on both sides of the Molonglo River.

History

The club's Club House was on a site near the Albert Hall and included the old brick fireplace and chimney of the nearby Kaye family's slab cottage. The Kaye family took over the lease of Klensendorlffe's stone villa in 1854 and in the early 1890s constructed a new slab home with the brick fireplace and chimney mentioned above. The site of this building, like the greens, is below the waters of Lake Burley Griffin.

Shortly before work commenced on the lake (early 1960s) the Royal Canberra Golf Club moved to its present site in Yarralumla.

The history of Royal Canberra Golf Club, or its predecessors, is almost as long as the history of the national capital itself.

The foundation stone for the city was laid in 1913 and in that same year, a few golfing enthusiasts established a nine-hole course on a site near to, what is now the city centre. Subsequently, in 1922, those stalwarts domiciled themselves on a new nine hole, sand green layout at Acton, sharing space with the Acton racecourse and leading to problem lies through omni-present hoof marks on the fairways. Things took a turn for the better, however, when in 1926, the Federal Capital Commission constructed a new golf course on an adjacent site at Acton, where the Canberra Golf Club had its first real home. That Acton course was built on the banks of the Molonglo River and, with the river as a constant threat to wayward shots, soon earned a reputation as a superb and challenging test of golf. With minor changes only to the layout, but major changes to the clubhouse, it remained the home of Royal Canberra Golf Club until 1962, the "Royal" status having been granted by King George V in 1933.

The Walter Burley Griffin plan for Canberra called for the damming of the Molonglo River to form a lake and so it was that, in 1962, with its Acton site due to be submerged in that plan, the Club moved to its present site at Westbourne Woods. In the 40 years since that move the Royal Canberra Golf Club has developed into Australia's pre-eminent inland golf course. Venue for a number of major tournaments, both amateur and professional, over the years the Royal Canberra course regularly features in Australia's top 50, relying on its natural beauty, its marvellous variety of trees and challenging design to occupy a rating well above many newer, resort-style courses.

2013 Women's Australian Open

Royal Canberra hosted the 2013 ISPS Handa Women's Australian Open, the length of the course was increased from 5891 metres to over 6000 meters.[1]

Course layout

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Metres4923431764533514282971423703,0523493413861413864283871554853,0566,108
Yards5383751924953834683241554043,3343813724191544224684231695303,3386,672
Par543545434374443454353673

Source:[2][3]

References

  1. Chris Dutton And Courtney Rees (23 January 2012). "Royal on par for Open upgrade". The Canberra Times. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  2. "2013 ISPS Handa Women's Australian Open: Course Map" (PDF). Royal Canberra Golf Club. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  3. "2013 course, hole by hole". Golf Australia.org.au. Retrieved February 4, 2013.

Coordinates: 35°18′14″S 149°05′24″E / 35.304°S 149.09°E / -35.304; 149.09

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.