The Grove Park Inn course originated as the Asheville Country Club’s ground, which predates the 1913 hotel and appears in resort literature and later summaries as having been in play by 1899; however, those same institutional sources alternatively describe the course as opening “around the time the inn first debuted,” reflecting uncertainty in the precise first-play date. What is documented is that the club sought modernization in the 1920s and retained Donald Ross to remodel the existing holes—work that the resort and period trade reports consistently place in 1926. Contemporary newspaper round-ups from 1923 and 1924 also credited Ross with “laying out” or lengthening the course, suggesting that planning and staged construction preceded the principal 1926 push. No accessible club minutes or correspondence have surfaced publicly to clarify when drawings were delivered versus when fieldwork occurred, nor to specify whether Ross returned after 1926; the default narrative, repeated by the resort and in hotel industry coverage of the later restoration, is a single major Ross remodeling in 1926 that established today’s hole sequence and green sites.
A second pivotal date in the property’s identity came in 1976, when “The Big Swap” transferred the Asheville Country Club’s in-town course to the Grove Park Inn while the club moved to the former Beaver Lake course. That exchange fixed the course’s modern association with the resort and preserved the Ross layout as a resort venue rather than a private club asset.
The most consequential modern intervention occurred in 2001–02, when the resort executed a $2.3 million restoration led by Kris Spence. The project enlarged and reshaped green perimeters to recapture original surface area and internal pitch, refreshed or repositioned bunkers in keeping with surviving evidence, and—per subsequent commentary from the Donald Ross Society—paired this with tree management to re-open intended width and angles. At completion the hotel installed a life-size Ross statue at the clubhouse to mark the course’s re-centering on its 1920s character.
Unique Design Characteristics
Ross’s remodeling here hinged on how a compact, neighborhood-bounded site could produce varied approach problems rather than brute length. The fourth hole, a difficult dogleg-left par four, demonstrates his preference—at Grove Park—for angled teeing relative to a fairway turning point: the tee lines across the inside corner, constricting a comfortable “stock” line and demanding shape or placement to open the green. The green itself reads deeper than it plays, rewarding distance control.
Short-two-shotters are a Grove Park signature. The sixth and fifteenth are instructive contrasts. At the sixth, a lay-up over a hidden pond sets a steep, uphill wedge to a perched surface—deceptively simple until the elevation and narrow corridor punish over-aggression. At the fifteenth, an elevated tee invites the bold player to chase a drivable target guarded left by bunkers that collect the prudent miss; either way, the ideal angle is secured from the left, a pattern consistent with Ross’s diagonal hazard deployment across several Asheville-area works.
Among the par threes, No. 2 introduces views and a large, back-to-front surface with terraced tees that change the shot’s effective yardage; No. 9 plays to a generous yet strongly sloped green pad with water left, a hole long associated with club lore—including a Bobby Jones exhibition moment that local accounts place on this tee. No. 17 sits beneath the hotel wing, its green ringed by sand and fall-off, demanding precise carry and distance control late in the round.
The par fives (8 and 12) trace rolling corridors where stance and lie rather than distance dictate aggression. The eighth’s fairway heaves emulate classic Ross “ride the contour” decision-making: a cut tee ball can shorten the second into a green flanked by right-side bunkering and a punishing left slope. Meanwhile, 12 tempts long hitters but often rewards a lay-up to the 125-yard shelf to avoid a downhill, hanging-lie pitch.
As surviving embodiments of Ross’s Grove Park work, the 4th (tee-to-green angle control), 9th (bold, back-to-front pitched surface with lateral hazard), and 15th (risk-reward short four, bunkers guarding the scoring line) are the clearest field examples today. Their playing notes align closely with Ross-era photographs and with the 2002 restoration intent to re-establish perimeters and strategic sand in ways that match the 1920s scheme.
Historical Significance
Within Ross’s body of work, Grove Park stands as his in-town re-imagining of an established club course amidst multiple Asheville commissions of the same decade (notably the 1927 Municipal and 1928 Beaver Lake/now Country Club of Asheville). That context matters because the property later functioned as a tour stop component: from 1933–1951 the “Land of the Sky Open” used several Asheville venues in rotation, with Friday play in 1940 contested on the Asheville Country Club course (now Grove Park), before moving to Beaver Lake and Biltmore Forest on subsequent days. Ben Hogan’s 1940 win capped a three-tournament run that revived his early career. The resort also points to visits and exhibition rounds by Bobby Jones and, in later decades, play by Jack Nicklaus and U.S. presidents—signals of the course’s sustained profile as a resort-town championship test even at modest yardage.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing continuity with the 1920s Ross plan appears largely intact, given the 2002 project’s focus on recovering (rather than replacing) green edges and bunker forms. Available photographs and descriptive accounts since the restoration describe enlarged green surfaces to reintroduce perimeter hole locations and internal tilt, along with re-established fairway width via tree management to restore outer lines of play—an approach consistent with Spence’s documented methods at Grove Park and other Ross venues in the state. Still, precise before-and-after drawings have not been published, leaving some details—such as the exact original bunker count/placement by hole—unverified in the public record.
The agronomy today is bentgrass on putting surfaces and, unusually for the region, on fairways, which underlines the course’s cool-season heritage and maintains the firm-over-contour ground game that Ross’s perched and canted targets here were meant to emphasize. Current resort materials list the course as par 70 with multiple rated sets; independent tee-sheet and scorecard aggregators show yardage variance from roughly 6,055 to 6,400 yards, almost certainly reflecting successive updates to tees and measurement standards rather than substantive routing change. As of the most recent resort descriptions, the course plays at 6,113 yards, with year-round public access when conditions allow.
Preserved: overall routing; principal green pads and their pitches after enlargement; short-par-four character (e.g., 15) and uphill approach motifs (e.g., 10); diagonal/positional bunkering on key holes.
Altered/Lost: some original tree-line openness prior to mid-century growth (mitigated in 2002 by removals); bunker shapes refined in restoration rather than strictly replicated where evidence was thin; tee yardages adjusted over time. Additional confirmation would require access to Ross’s original or annotated plan set (if extant) and period aerials.
Sources & Notes
Omni Hotels—Grove Park Inn golf pages: course ratings/slope, access and facilities; resort “golf” overview noting 6,113 yards and famous visitors. Also resort history page for hotel opening context.
— Golf Course page (ratings/slope); Golf overview (6,113 yards; par 70; not exclusive to guests); Hotel Business (May 14, 2002): “Grove Park Inn Completes $2.3M Golf Course Renovation”—confirms 2001–02 restoration scope, green perimeter enlargement, and resort’s attribution of a 1926 Ross redesign.
Donald Ross Society features / commentary referencing Kris Spence’s restoration practice, including reinstating broader fairway widths at Grove Park.
Graylyn Loomis, “Grove Park Inn Golf Course Review” (Sept. 29, 2014): course history summary (1926 Ross remodel; 1976 “Big Swap”; 2002 restoration) and hole-by-hole observations used to identify present-day Ross characteristics at specific holes.
Golf Club Atlas forum thread “Grove Park Inn” (2012–14): reproduces 1923 Charlotte Observer and 1924 Richmond Times-Dispatch clippings crediting Ross with “laying out”/lengthening; discussion of early dates and the “Big Swap.” (Secondary/tertiary; used here to flag uncertainties and competing claims pending primary verification.)
Historic Hotels of America (Omni Grove Park Inn—Golf): states redesign in 1926 and that the course opened “around the time the inn first debuted.” (House description—treated as institutional secondary.)
WNC Magazine (May 2010), “The Late Start”: tournament history of the Land of the Sky Open (1933–51) with 1940 rounds played at Asheville CC (now Grove Park), Beaver Lake, and Biltmore Forest; Hogan win context.
Asheville.com archived notice (2001): renovation announcement naming Kris Spence/Classic Golf Course Design; includes a contested “1911” phrasing about original state—flagged here as inconsistent with hotel opening in 1913 and other Ross-date sources.
Disputed/Uncertain Points (requiring primary verification):
• Original architect and first opening date. Some sources claim 1899 construction; others say “around 1913.” No publicly available club minutes or contemporary course-opening notices were found in this search. Verification would require Asheville newspaper archives (1894–1915), Asheville Country Club records (if retained by successors), and the Tufts Archives (Pinehurst) for any Ross routing or green plans referencing Asheville Country Club prior to 1926.
• Ross chronology (1923–26). Resort and industry sources fix the redesign to 1926; period clippings (1923–24) credit Ross with “laying out” or lengthening, which may indicate earlier planning phases. Access to dated drawings, correspondence, or construction invoices (Ross office records; Tufts Archives; resort/club files) would resolve sequencing.
• Precise original bunker plan and green sizes by hole. The 2002 restoration aimed to “enlarge/reshape to original contour,” but without published comparative drawings. Aerial photography (1920s–1950s) and any extant field sketches would quantify change and confirm fidelity.