Urban golf

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The first player teeing off at the 2005 Shoreditch Urban Open, London
The first player teeing off at the 2005 Shoreditch Urban Open, London

Urban golf is a game, derived from the original game of golf, in which individual players or teams hit a ball into a hole or at a specified target using various clubs.

Urban golf is currently becoming popular across the world in many varying formats. Its origin is ambiguous but is believed to be started in Scotland in 1741 outside The White Hart Inn in the Grassmarket area of Edinburgh by a Duncan Thomas.

There are now many organizations across the world actuating this seemingly destructive past-time. Shoreditch Golf Club [1] formed the first 18 hole, par 72 open tournament in London in 2004. urbangolf.org [2] in Idaho, USA and the Urban Golf Associations [3] Bi-Annual Charles Bukowski North Beach Invitational in San Francisco predate this by a few years with a smaller format. Other organisations are springing up including The Royal Urban Golf Club (RUGC, [4]) in Switzerland, Australian Urban Golfing [5], StreetGolfTeam [6] and Urban Golf France [7] in France. Unlike these organizations which use public city areas, Cross Golf, a variation on Urban Golf, exists across the world in the form of Natural Born Golfers [8] and UrbanGolf.nl [9]. Cross Golf utilizes disused urban environments, building sites, rooftops, canals, hotel lobbies, school campus sites etc, etc, as courses.

Urban Golf Belgium (UGB, [10]) and Antwerp Urban Golf Club (AUGC, [11]) roam the streets, parks and beaches of Antwerpen, Flanders and the whole of Belgium. They play with the almostGOLF ball [12], the ball most likely to become the international urban golf standard. Some courses: Antwerpen Skyline, Antwerpen Historisch, Antwerpen South Central, Gent Historisch. With more courses to come.

The Australian Urban Golfing style consists of a set target such as "play to the beach" or "play to the pub" lowest strokes the winner with the emphasis being on freestyle elements along the way such as "who can pop over that" "around that corner by bouncing off that tree" etc

A variant of Urban Golf, Campus Golf, is played on college campuses.

Contents

[edit] Anatomy of an Urban golf course

The fundamental difference between Urban Golf and its verdant brother is the lack of nature and the high frequency of public houses. As in normal golf, many holes include hazards but these are natural to an urban environment and are not bunkers (or sand traps), but street furniture and drains. Often many unexpected situations can arise from the environment such as dogs not kept on leashes tend to chase balls, players dropping clubs down drains, traffic etc.

[edit] Ethos

Urban golf is seen by many as social commentary on the nature of golf and its traditional opinions and attitudes. Considering golf pompous, dogmatic and quite often inaccessible, urban golfers worldwide have adopted many different urban environments as their new course to engage in this recreational pastime. Commonly, urban golf organisations tend toward using disused or under utilised urban areas to play golf, not just to reduce the risk of damage or injury, but also as a statement toward the development and reuse of the city. Some have found themselves being commended for this, such as the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment's (CABE)[13] support of Shoreditch Golf Club in London.

Whilst there is a seemingly inherent disregard for public safety and damage to buildings, all organisations have one common rule, safety.

[edit] Equipment

[edit] Balls

Balls used in urban golf vary relative to each organization and context. Although real golf balls are used in some circumstances where risk from injury is low, other balls used are Tennis Balls, Squash Balls, 'AlmostGolf' Balls, Air Flow Balls, Cayman Balls and many types of adapted or customized balls. Shoreditch Golf Club produces and manufactures its own design of ball specifically for this game.

[edit] Golf clubs

Main article: Golf club (equipment)

A standard set of golf clubs is used in urban golf. The three major club types; woods, irons, and putters are used to varying degrees depending on the urban golf format.

Australian Urban Golfers prefer to use a mixed bag which includes a nice high club around the S PW or 9 area a driving club which would be no lower than a 5 or 7 Iron and also a left handed club for getting out of tight situations where you have been turned around or up against an object.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Urban Golf

[edit] Related - Cross Golf

[edit] Architecture and maintenance of urban golf courses

[edit] Name Sakes

In other languages