- AddressRolnicza 1, 42-274 Konopiska, Poland
The city of Czestochowa in the south of Poland is a place of pilgrimage for many Christians who come to pay homage at the Jasna Gora Monastery, a famous shrine to the Virgin Mary, which houses the Black Madonna painting. To the south west of the city, Rosa Golf Club has also received a steady stream of (probably less religious) visiting golfers since it first opened its doors in 2005.
Designed by architect Hans-Georg Erhardt, the course at Rosa was built to exacting USGA specification on a largely flat, uninteresting landscape. To create some movement across this dull terrain, over a million cubic metres of soil was shifted during construction, creating a series of small, interconnected lakes which now irrigate the layout.
Feature holes here include a couple of short par fours on the front nine, at the 330-metre 2nd and 332-metre 5th, both of which dogleg left from tee to green. On the inward half, water protects the putting surface at the 192-metre 14th and 172-metre 17th as the green for each of these par three holes lies on the other side of small, intimidating lakes.
The city of Czestochowa in the south of Poland is a place of pilgrimage for many Christians who come to pay homage at the Jasna Gora Monastery, a famous shrine to the Virgin Mary, which houses the Black Madonna painting. To the south west of the city, Rosa Golf Club has also received a steady stream of (probably less religious) visiting golfers since it first opened its doors in 2005.
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