Moscow Country Club

Moscow Country Club
Club information
Coordinates55.862°N 37.205°E / 55.862; 37.205
LocationNakhabino, Russia
Established1994
Operated byMoscow Country Club
Total holes18
Tournaments hostedRussian Open
Websitewww.moscowcountryclub.ru
Designed byRobert Trent Jones, Jr.
Par72
Length7,154 yards

The Moscow Country Club is a golf club in Russia.

Golf

The idea of building a championship golf course in Russia, dates back to the early 1970s when leaders of the Russian Government invited American executive Armand Hammer to Russia to find out what Russia needed to entice Western business. Hammer answered "limousines and a golf course".[1]

In 1988 construction began on what, six years later, was Russia's first 18-hole golf course. in the birch forest in Nakhabino 15 km from Outer Ring Road (MKAD).

The club has an 18-hole, 7,015 yard championship golf course designed by Robert Trent Jones, Jr. The European PGA endorsed the club. Since its opening in 1993, the Moscow Country Club has become the permanent venue for a number of major golf competitions, including the Russian Open, the country's first professional golf tournament. The golf course is open from May to October.

In addition to its championship golf course the Resort has a large sports complex, residential village of 54 timber dachas and 14 townhouses, restaurant and club house, and a 131-room hotel and business center with conference facilities, ten meeting rooms, and a 247-seat auditorium. There are indoor and outdoor recreational activities including mini-golf, computerized golf simulator, outdoor/indoor swimming pools, tennis courts and a natural lake with a sandy beach, restaurants, and bars, individual Hungarian style barbecues, sand volleyball, paddle boats and fishing.

Golf is being increasingly promoted by the Russian Government as a healthy sporting activity for all age groups.

Moscow Country Club has been the venue for European Tour event, the Russian Open since its inauguration, and also hosts the annual President of Russia Golf Cup.

gollark: People are somewhat apiological sometimes and say "oh, but it's good because it balances out power in rural areas".
gollark: Well, Event 128-κ is probably *not* going to be repeated.
gollark: I heard they have very insecure voting machines.
gollark: The solution is simple: go to Russia, and hack into the US electoral system.
gollark: Probably copied from the UK constituency system.

References

  1. Kramer, Andrew E. (September 8, 2006). "They May Say, 'Tiger Who?' but They Like His Sport". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-22.

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