Golf course layout basics
Famous Examples of Golf Course Layout Basics
See how well-known course styles teach angles, hazards, wind, and restraint.

Famous layouts teach ordinary lessons
You do not need to play championship venues to learn from them. Links courses teach wind and ground game. Parkland courses teach tree lines and approach angles. Desert courses teach forced carries and disciplined targets. Resort courses often teach visibility, comfort, and recovery options.
What each style asks
| Style | Main lesson | Useful shot |
|---|---|---|
| Links | Use wind and bounce | Low runner |
| Parkland | Find the right side | Controlled tee ball |
| Desert | Avoid wild misses | Conservative target |
| Mountain | Adjust for elevation | Balanced strike |
Borrow the lesson locally
Your home course probably has the same ideas in smaller form. A diagonal bunker line on a municipal par 4 works like a championship carry: bite off more angle for a shorter approach, or play away and accept a longer one.
Watch pros, then scale down
Tour players may fly corners you should never challenge. The useful part is their process: carry number, wind, lie, trouble, and preferred miss. If your reliable carry is 205, build the plan around 205, not the one drive you once hit 240.