Belvoir Park Golf Club

Belvoir Park Golf Club
Club information
Location in Northern Ireland
Coordinates 54°33′41″N 5°54′51″W / 54.561466°N 5.914187°W / 54.561466; -5.914187Coordinates: 54°33′41″N 5°54′51″W / 54.561466°N 5.914187°W / 54.561466; -5.914187
Location Belfast, Northern Ireland
Established 1927, 91 years ago
Type Private
Total holes 18
Tournaments hosted Irish Open (1949, 1953)
Website belvoirparkgolfclub.com
Belvoir Park GC
Designed by Harry Colt
Par 70/71
Length 6,685 yards (6,113 m)
Course record Alex McCloy (65, 2008)[1]

The Belvoir Park Golf Club is in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The course has eighteen holes with a par of 71.

History and attributes

The course was founded in 1927, designed by Harry Colt. Each round being just under 6,600 yards, Belvoir Park has played host to championships including the Irish Open in the late 1940s and the early 1950s and the Irish PGA Championship in 1995 the Irish Amateur close in 2009 and also the British Ladies amateur championship in 2011. The winner on that occasion, Harry Bradshaw took the view afterwards that it was "the best inland course I have ever played".[2]

Famous golfers such as Peter Alliss and Fred Daly have rated the course one of the best inland courses in the British Isles.[3]

The Belvoir Park Golf Club is accessed from Church Road, Belfast. The course has eighteen holes with three sets of tees:

  • A par of 71 from the white competition tees covering 6,270 yards (5,730 m)
  • A par of 71 from the forward yellow tees covering 6,685 yards (6,113 m)
  • A par of 70 from the championship blue tees covering 6,800 yards (6,200 m)

The course is immediately south of Belfast city centre and can be accessed in about 15 minutes from the city airport, city centre hotels and cruise liner port. To east and west are attractions: Belvoir Park Forest and Forestside Shopping centre; to the south is a motorway and to the north is an estate of large houses.

References

  1. McCloy sets Belvoir course record BBC news, 8 June 2008
  2. "Belvoir Park Golf Club". irishgolfcourses.co.uk. Archived from the original on 17 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-04.
  3. "Belvoir Park Golf Club". Celtic Links. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.