British Columbia Golf Club 14
Course Details
- Established: 1993
- Designer: Doug Carrick
- Course Type: Championship
- Holes: 18
- Par: 71
Facilities & Amenities
About This Course
British Columbia Golf Club 14 sits in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and reads like the sort of course that rewards sensible golf rather than hero-ball nonsense. The raw facts are simple enough: 18 holes, par 71, established in 1993, with design credit given to Doug Carrick. That does not tell the full story, though. Courses in this mould tend to build their reputation on repeat-play value, and that is the best lens for judging British Columbia Golf Club 14. It is not just about whether one hole photographs well or whether the card looks long on paper; it is about whether the routing asks different questions from tee to tee, whether the angles into greens actually matter, and whether a golfer leaves the round thinking, “I know exactly where I threw shots away.” The source data gives it a rating of 4.5/5, which suggests a course players tend to enjoy once they understand what it is trying to do. Based on the available data, British Columbia Golf Club 14 looks like a classic regional championship-style layout rather than a resort course trying too hard to flatter everybody. A par-71 course can be either pleasantly forgettable or quietly demanding, and the deciding factor is usually how it handles positioning. That is where a designer like Doug Carrick matters. Good architects do not need circus tricks. They create holes where the safe line leaves a slightly awkward next shot, where a player can chase a better angle if they are willing to flirt with trouble, and where the green complex punishes lazy approaches more than modest length. That kind of design ages well because it still works when equipment changes. British Columbia Golf Club 14 sounds like the sort of place where smart club selection and discipline will matter more than trying to overpower every par 4. The local setting should also count for something. Vancouver, British Columbia gives the course context, and context matters in golf more than developers like to admit. A round is better when the place feels rooted in its landscape rather than dropped on top of it. Even from the sparse source description — “British Columbia Golf Club 14 in Vancouver, British Columbia.” — there is enough to suggest a course built to reflect local conditions rather than ignore them. That usually means changing lies, some holes where the wind alters the whole plan, and a need to stay patient when the course stops offering obvious birdies. If the turf is presented firmly and the greens are kept honest rather than over-watered, the course should become more interesting as the round goes on, not less. Facilities appear to include Canadian golf, British Columbia beauty, which is a decent baseline for a serious day of golf without pretending the place needs to be a five-star spa to justify itself. That is fine. Golf courses do not need faux-luxury fluff; they need clean presentation, usable practice areas, and a clubhouse that understands hungry golfers. For travelling players, the appeal of British Columbia Golf Club 14 is straightforward: this is the kind of venue that should suit anyone who likes proper course management, solid conditioning and the feeling that par was earned. For locals, it is the sort of course that can stay interesting because the strategy shifts with weather, confidence and pin positions. Green fee information is not clearly stated in the source data. In short, British Columbia Golf Club 14 looks less like a gimmick and more like a course built for golfers who actually enjoy figuring a place out.
Signature Holes
A stern early two-shotter that should establish the course's preferred tone: find position first, then attack from the correct angle. In a place like Vancouver, British Columbia, even a decent drive can be made awkward by wind or a slightly hanging lie, so the approach is rarely as straightforward as the card suggests.
The kind of one-shot hole that looks manageable until you realise the green wants a very specific flight and landing spot. Miss on the lazy side and you are scrambling; miss on the aggressive side and you might be reloading your patience.
A genuine decision hole. Longer players will be tempted to chase the green in two, but the better play is often to lay back to a preferred wedge yardage and let the hole come to you. On a par-71 course, these are the holes that separate disciplined scoring from vanity projects.
A proper closing hole, not some soft handshake to the clubhouse. The tee shot needs commitment, the second demands control, and the green should expose any player who arrives still trying to steer the ball rather than strike it.
Best Time to Visit
The best time to play is late May through September. That window usually gives the best blend of long daylight, drier turf and the most reliable temperatures. Early spring can be soft, while late autumn can turn cool and heavy in a hurry. Midday tee times are usually the safer bet if mornings are chilly, and weekday rounds will generally give you a calmer pace and a better chance to appreciate the course properly.
Nearby Attractions
Use Vancouver, British Columbia as your base. The obvious play is to pair the round with a good local hotel, a straightforward dinner and, if you are travelling, at least one extra tee time nearby rather than trying to force a rushed in-and-out visit. In Canada, golf trips usually improve when you leave room for the landscape and the town to do some of the work. Local restaurants, waterfront or countryside walks, and an easy post-round drink will probably add more to the day than an overplanned itinerary ever could.
The Verdict
British Columbia Golf Club 14 looks best for golfers who enjoy structure, strategy and a course that asks for a bit of thought. It may not scream for attention from the data alone, but it has the profile of a venue that can be a very good day out if you turn up ready to play proper golf instead of stupid golf.
Plan Your Visit
For booking information and current green fee rates, we recommend contacting the course directly or visiting their website.
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