Münchener Golf Club dates back to 1910 but its current 27-hole golf facility is relatively modern. Eighteen Bernhard von Limburger holes were unveiled in 1964 and Kurt Rossknecht added another nine in 1996 before Perry Dye carried out a complete remodel a decade later.
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Münchener Golf Club dates back to 1910 but its current 27-hole golf facility is relatively modern. Eighteen Bernhard von Limburger holes were unveiled in 1964 and Kurt Rossknecht added another nine in 1996 before Perry Dye carried out a complete remodel a decade later.
Münchener (B & C)
Münchener Golf Club dates back to 1910 but its current 27-hole golf facility is relatively modern. Eighteen Bernhard von Limburger holes were unveiled in 1964 and Kurt Rossknecht added another nine in 1996 before Perry Dye carried out a complete remodel a decade later.
We feature the longest 18-hole combination (B & C) here but there’s a lot to commend the A circuit, especially for golfers with an aversion to water-laden holes – only the par five A1 hole features an aquatic hazard with a pond positioned to the front right of the green. In addition, the A3 par three has an eye-catching bunker wrapped round three quarters of the green and another enormous sand hazard fronts the par three A7 hole.
Highlight holes on the B circuit include the 219-metre B2 (with three large bunkers placed around an offset angled green); the 417-metre B6 (where the fairway narrows quite a bit as it snakes towards the green; and the 498-metre B8 which doglegs right past a couple of fairway bunkers to a green that’s protected by a pond to the front left of the putting surface.
Notable holes on the C loop include the 422-metre C2 (with out of bounds to the right and a couple of ponds on the left – one incorporating a large beach bunker next to the green – on the left); the 202-metre C3 (featuring water to the front left of the green and sand on three sides of the putting surface; and the 531-metre C6 which doglegs gently right to another sand and water-protected green.