Logo
Panel background

Noria Golf Club

Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco

Want to play
Have played

Situated close to the small village of Chrifia, on the southern periphery of Marrakech, the course at Noria Golf Club celebrates the traditional architecture and landscape features of its surroundings...

Overall rating

Course rating full ball
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image
Gallery image

Noria Golf Club

Situated close to the small village of Chrifia, on the southern periphery of Marrakech, the course at Noria Golf Club celebrates the traditional architecture and landscape features of its surroundings, embracing diagonal water ditches (seguia), natural creeks (oued) and a water lifting wheel (noria) with small buckets to transfer this precious natural resource into small aqueducts for irrigation.

Three distinct landforms are encountered during a round at Noria: olive orchards (in the making) and (recently planted) lavender fields on the early holes, rugged desert terrain on the back nine and, in between, a formal oasis that runs north from the clubhouse, affecting the closing holes on each of the returning nines. In due course, residential units will be constructed, located in three sectors, two on the outward half and one on the inward half.

Anchoring the development, a stunning two-storey clubhouse, designed by Youssef El Melehi, sits in front of the formal pool that separates the 9th and 18th greens. The canvas roof of this magnificent structure takes its inspiration from the nomad’s tent, wrapping itself around a large observation tower, the largest of several that run through the spine of the property.

On the course, the opening hole plays to an offset green, the first of several putting surfaces placed diagonally to the centreline of the fairway. Another diagonal element arises at the next hole, where a water channel cuts across the fairway at a 45-degree angle in front of the green. The left doglegged 4th features the only bunkerless green on the course and it’s followed by the longest par five on the card, as holes swing back towards the clubhouse, with the Atlas Mountains as a backdrop.

The remarkable 175-metre 8th is without doubt the signature hole at Noria, played from an elevated tee position across a reflecting pool to a rectangular Biarritz green that sits between the water and an authentic Moroccan bell tower. It’s a very simple, yet incredibly visual little hole that will live very long in memory of golfers who play here.

On the back nine, the short par four 11th doglegs right across a dry-bed creek to a two-tiered hour glass-shaped green that slopes markedly from front to back. A path strewn with large rocks and cactus plants then leads down to another thrilling short hole, with the fairway and semi-blind green of the 12th hole lying well below the level of the surrounding rocky terrain.

The routing heads north again at the 14th, the first of back-to-back par fives, with a big carry required over a wetland area from the tee. A large body of water sits to the left of this hole and a water channel – complete with Noria water wheel – runs away from the lake, before cutting diagonally across the front of the 15th green.

The round ends in spectacular style with the 18th returning to the 9th hole’s long water channel, but this time on the other side of the reflecting pool. To the right of the tee boxes, there’s a traditional Moroccan irrigation system (a “khettara”) with open pits leading to an abandoned underground canal. A diagonal line of bunkers protects the front of the rectangular putting surface, whilst water to the left of the fairway challenges all the way to the home green.

Loading...