TPC Harding Park
TPC Harding Park is a public municipal golf facility in San Francisco, California, featuring a par-72, 18-hole championship course measuring 7,251 yards and a par-36, 9-hole Fleming executive course, both set along the shores of Lake Merced in the city's southwest corner.[1][2] Opened on July 18, 1925, and designed by Scottish architect Willie Watson with input from local architect Sam Whiting, the course was named in honor of U.S. President Warren G. Harding, an avid golfer who died in office two years prior.[3][4][5] After periods of deterioration and closure in the 1990s, the Harding Park course underwent a major $32 million renovation from 2002 to 2003, restoring its original design elements while adding modern features like improved drainage, bentgrass greens, and strategic bunkering framed by native Monterey cypress and eucalyptus trees.[6][7] In 2010, it joined the PGA Tour's TPC (Tournament Players Club) Network as the first municipally owned addition, enabling it to host high-profile professional events such as the 2009 Presidents Cup, the 2020 PGA Championship—where Collin Morikawa claimed his first major victory—and various World Golf Championships.[6][2][4] Renowned for its challenging layout that rewards accurate ball-striking over distance, TPC Harding Park consistently ranks among the top municipal courses in the United States and California.[8][9]
History
Founding and early development
Harding Park Golf Course, a public municipal facility in San Francisco's Outer Sunset District along Lake Merced, was named in honor of U.S. President Warren G. Harding, an enthusiastic golfer who died suddenly in the city on August 2, 1923, while en route from Alaska.[10][6] The course's development was initiated by the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department to expand public access to golf amid growing demand in the early 20th century, utilizing 163 acres of city-owned land previously considered for other recreational uses.[11][12] The layout was designed by Scottish-born architect Willie Watson and local superintendent Sam Whiting, the same team responsible for the Olympic Club's Lake Course opened in 1924.[7][6] Watson, known for strategic routing emphasizing natural contours and minimal artificial shaping, collaborated with Whiting to craft an 18-hole championship-caliber course featuring firm, fast greens and tree-lined fairways that integrated the site's coastal dunes and proximity to Lake Merced for wind-influenced play.[13][14] Construction emphasized economical use of the terrain, with Watson submitting a detailed plan for $300, prioritizing playability for average golfers while challenging experts through elevation changes and strategic bunkering.[15] The course officially opened to the public on July 18, 1925, less than two years after Harding's death, drawing immediate praise for its quality as one of the nation's premier municipal venues and establishing it as a hub for local competitive golf.[6][16] Early operations focused on accommodating San Francisco's burgeoning golf community, with the city investing in basic irrigation and maintenance infrastructure to support year-round play despite the foggy, windy conditions.[3] By the late 1920s, it had begun hosting amateur events, reflecting its rapid integration into the regional golf scene.[15]Mid-century prominence and tournaments
Harding Park achieved notable prominence in the mid-20th century as one of America's leading municipal golf courses, serving as a regular host for both professional PGA Tour events and prestigious amateur competitions that drew national attention and top talent.[7] Professional play began in 1944 with the Victory Open, a wartime renaming of the San Francisco Open, where Byron Nelson claimed victory in the summer edition and repeated later that December, contributing to his record streak of 11 consecutive PGA Tour wins the following year.[7] The course hosted PGA Tour stops through the late 1940s, establishing it as a key West Coast venue amid limited options for public-accessible professional golf.[6] Amateur events bolstered its reputation, including the 1956 U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, which highlighted the course's suitability for high-level public competition.[10] That same year, the ongoing San Francisco City Championship—dating back to the course's early years—featured a dramatic final between Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward, attracting 10,000 spectators and earning front-page newspaper coverage for its intensity and local significance.[10] The late 1950s and 1960s saw further professional elevation with the 1959 Golden Gate Open, won by Mason Rudolph.[7] From 1961 to 1969 (skipping 1966), the Lucky International Open, sponsored by a local brewery, became a fixture, yielding seven editions with winners including Gary Player (1961), Gene Littler (1962), Jack Burke Jr. (1963), Billy Casper (1964), George Archer (1965), Ken Venturi (1967), and Chi Chi Rodriguez (1969); six of these victors held major championships, and the events lured stars like Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus.[7][10] This era of tournaments, culminating in the 1969 San Francisco Open, underscored Harding Park's mid-century status before maintenance neglect contributed to its later decline.[10]Decline, renovation, and modern revival
In the latter half of the 20th century, Harding Park suffered progressive deterioration as municipal budgets constrained routine upkeep, resulting in overgrown fairways, degraded greens, and inadequate irrigation systems that rendered the course unplayable during dry seasons.[17] This neglect culminated in 1998, when the facility hit its nadir: its fairways were repurposed as an overflow parking lot for spectators attending the U.S. Open at the adjacent Olympic Club, underscoring the course's fall from championship caliber to utilitarian afterthought.[18][19] Renovation efforts began in spring 2002 under the direction of architect Chris Gray, working with the PGA TOUR and local stakeholders including former USGA president Sandy Tatum, to faithfully restore the original 1925 layout by William Watson and Sam Whiting while addressing modern playability.[16][11] The project, completed after 15 months, incorporated bentgrass greens, improved drainage via redesigned bunkers and swales, reshaped fairways to original contours, and upgraded irrigation and cart paths, enabling the course to reopen on August 22, 2003.[6][20] These changes eliminated chronic flooding issues and restored strategic elements like elevated greens and native dune features, transforming the site back into a links-style test resilient to San Francisco's coastal winds.[18] The post-renovation era marked Harding Park's revival as a premier public venue, with the PGA TOUR assuming management responsibilities to ensure sustained quality and event readiness.[21] Designated TPC Harding Park in recognition of its elevated standards, the facility underwent targeted updates—including a 2013 greens reconstruction with TifEagle bermudagrass and a 2020 re-grassing of the Fleming 9 executive course—to maintain tournament-level conditioning.[2][22] This stewardship, unique among municipal courses as the only one operated by the PGA TOUR, has preserved affordability for public access while positioning it for high-profile competitions, reversing decades of underinvestment through revenue from play and events.[23]Course Design and Layout
Architectural origins and evolution
The Harding Park golf course, now known as the TPC Harding Park Harding Course, was originally designed by Scottish-born architect Willie Watson and San Francisco greenkeeper Sam Whiting, with construction completed and the layout opening to play on July 18, 1925.[6] [2] The 18-hole parkland-style course occupied 163 acres along the shores of Lake Merced in southwestern San Francisco, incorporating rolling terrain, native dunes, and strategic bunkering influenced by Watson's experience with inland links-style architecture and Whiting's local knowledge of the site's coastal winds and firm soils.[6] [14] This collaboration mirrored their earlier work on the Lake Course at The Olympic Club, completed the prior year, emphasizing natural green contours and penal hazards over artificial shaping to reward precise shot-making.[6] [13] Over the mid-20th century, the course hosted professional events but suffered from urban encroachment, underfunding, and deferred maintenance, leading to overgrown roughs, inconsistent green speeds, and shortened playable length that diminished its challenge.[14] By 1998, sections of the layout had deteriorated to the point of serving as overflow parking for the U.S. Open at The Olympic Club, highlighting systemic neglect by city management.[6] A comprehensive restoration commenced in 2002 under the leadership of former USGA president Sandy Tatum, supported by the PGA Tour, to reclaim Watson and Whiting's foundational design while adapting for modern tournament demands.[6] [15] The $16 million project, directed by PGA Tour on-site architect Chris Gray, extended the course from 6,743 yards to roughly 7,200 yards through tee expansions, rebuilt bunkers to original specifications, restored green sizes and undulations using historical plans, and upgraded irrigation, drainage, and turf to bentgrass for year-round playability.[20] [14] These modifications preserved the architects' emphasis on strategic angles and recovery options while eliminating non-original trees and improving fairway corridors for elite competition, with the course reopening on August 22, 2003.[6] Subsequent tweaks in 2005, including further agronomic enhancements, solidified its readiness for PGA Tour standards without altering core routing or hole philosophies.[2]Key features and strategic elements
The Harding Course at TPC Harding Park features tree-lined fairways bordered by mature cypress trees and runs parallel to Lake Merced, creating a parkland-style layout with graceful undulations in the terrain.[24] Originally designed by Willie Watson and Sam Whiting in 1925 and renovated in 2005 to extend the course by 400 yards to meet PGA TOUR standards, the layout emphasizes shot-making precision over raw distance, with soft bunkers strategically placed to punish errant drives rather than overly penalize recoveries.[24] [25] The greens, renovated in 2013-2014, are firm and receptive to well-struck approaches but incorporate subtle slopes, tiers, and false fronts that demand accurate iron play and careful green reading.[24] [25] Strategically, the course rewards positioning off the tee, as narrow corridors flanked by trees and rough require straight shots to set up favorable angles for approaches; for instance, on the 466-yard par-4 second hole, navigating cypress trees and fairway bunkers favors a controlled drive over aggressive play.[25] Par-5s like the 607-yard fourth demand layup decisions around doglegs and hazards, while long par-3s such as the 251-yard eighth test distance control into guarded greens with minimal bailout areas.[25] The closing 463-yard par-4 eighteenth requires a precise tee shot over a Lake Merced inlet to access a narrow, elevated green, often leaving mid-irons for pros and underscoring the course's emphasis on risk-reward calculus amid scenic coastal influences.[25] [26] Overall, TPC Harding Park's design philosophy, preserved through restorations, promotes causal realism in golf—where empirical shot patterns and first-principles positioning yield lower scores amid wind-exposed, relatively flat terrain that amplifies small errors.[26]Harding Course scorecard
The Harding Course is an 18-hole, par-72 championship layout spanning 6,845 yards from the farthest blue tees, with a course rating of 72.8 and slope rating of 126.[27] Shorter white tees measure 6,405 yards (rating 70.6, slope 123), while forward red tees play to 5,875 yards (men's rating 66.0, slope 120; ladies' rating 73.2, slope 123, with par adjusted to 73). Gold tees for ladies extend 5,375 yards (rating 70.4, slope 106).[27] Yardages from the blue tees include four par-3s averaging approximately 170 yards, ten par-4s averaging 410 yards, and four par-5s averaging 540 yards.[28] [25] The front nine plays through 3,435 yards, featuring longer par-4s and par-5s interspersed with shorter par-3s, while the back nine totals 3,410 yards with a mix of reachable par-5s and strategic doglegs.[27]| Tee | Yardage | Rating (Men/Ladies) | Slope (Men/Ladies) | Par (Men/Ladies) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blue | 6,845 | 72.8 | 126 | 72 |
| White | 6,405 | 70.6 | 123 | 72 |
| Red | 5,875 | 66.0 / 73.2 | 120 / 123 | 72 / 73 |
| Gold | 5,375 | / 70.4 | / 106 | / 73 |
Facilities and Amenities
Fleming 9 executive course
The Fleming 9 is a nine-hole executive golf course situated within the grounds of TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, California, designed primarily for shorter play and accessibility.[29] Constructed in 1961, it functions as a par-30 layout featuring six par-3 holes and three par-4 holes, emphasizing precise club selection and approach shots over distance.[30] [31] From the member tees, the course measures 2,165 yards, while the forward tees play to 1,865 yards, making it suitable for beginners, juniors, and those seeking a quicker round amid the park's championship facilities.[30] It carries a course rating of 61.4 and a slope rating of 95, positioning it as a moderate challenge that promotes skill development without the length of the adjacent 18-hole Harding Course.[32] Often described as a "grow-the-game" short course, the Fleming 9 integrates seamlessly into TPC Harding Park's operations, offering tee times bookable up to 30 days in advance and serving as an entry point for casual or developmental play.[33] [34] Despite its relative obscurity compared to the main course—sometimes referred to as a "hidden" gem within the property—the Fleming 9 maintains high upkeep standards typical of TPC Network venues, with well-manicured greens and strategic bunkering that reward accurate iron play.[31] [35] Access is available to the public through San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department rates for residents and non-residents alike, though demand can limit availability during peak seasons.[29]Practice areas and infrastructure
The driving range at TPC Harding Park features Toptracer technology, providing golfers with data-driven feedback on ball flight, distance, and accuracy during practice sessions.[36] Renovated in 2021, the facility includes 20 artificial turf hitting stalls, an expansive target fairway with nine distance markers, and premium range balls dispensed in buckets that must be purchased separately via credit card or cash.[37] Available bucket sizes range from 20 balls for $5.00 to 90 balls for $22.50, with the range operating daily from 6:30 a.m. (7:30 a.m. on Mondays) until 45 minutes before sunset.[38][36] Short-game practice is supported by a dedicated area for chipping and pitching, complemented by a grass putting green, both introduced as part of the 2021 upgrades to accommodate precise wedge and approach shot refinement.[37] The short-game area is accessible free of charge to all visitors but closes on Wednesdays for turf recovery and may be unavailable during winter due to weather conditions.[36] The main putting green, however, is restricted to players holding a valid tee time for that day and remains closed on Mondays for maintenance.[36] These elements form a comprehensive practice infrastructure tailored for public use while meeting professional tournament standards, reflecting TPC Network investments in a municipal venue to elevate accessibility and quality.[37][39]Hosted Events
Professional tournaments and majors
TPC Harding Park has hosted several high-profile professional golf tournaments since its renovation in the early 2000s, establishing it as a venue capable of accommodating elite competition. The course's firm, fast playing conditions and strategic layout have tested top players in stroke-play and match-play formats.[6][7] The most prominent event was the 102nd PGA Championship, held from August 6 to 9, 2020, after being postponed from May due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This marked the first major championship hosted at a TPC Network property and drew a field of 156 players, including the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Collin Morikawa won at 13-under-par, defeating Paul Casey, Dustin Johnson, Jason Day, and Matthew Fitzpatrick by two strokes, highlighted by a final-round 64 featuring an eagle on the par-5 16th hole. The tournament showcased the course's difficulty, with fairway accuracy at 61% and greens in regulation at 64%, ranking it among the toughest setups in recent PGA Championship history.[40][5][41] Other notable professional events include the 2005 WGC-American Express Championship, won by Tiger Woods; the 2009 Presidents Cup, where the U.S. team under captain Fred Couples defeated the International team 19½–14½; and the 2015 WGC-Cadillac Match Play, which introduced a 64-player bracket format and was won by Rory McIlroy. The course also hosted the Charles Schwab Cup Championship in 2010, 2011, and 2013 on the PGA Tour Champions circuit, with Fred Couples victorious in 2010. These events underscored Harding Park's post-renovation viability for professional play, with the Presidents Cup drawing former U.S. President Barack Obama as an honorary observer in 2009.[4][16][42] TPC Harding Park is scheduled to host the Presidents Cup again in 2025, pitting the U.S. team against an International squad in a team match-play format, further cementing its status in professional golf.[3][43]| Event | Year | Winner/Outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| WGC-American Express Championship | 2005 | Tiger Woods | First PGA Tour event post-renovation[3] |
| Presidents Cup | 2009 | U.S. Team (19½–14½) | Captained by Fred Couples[16] |
| Charles Schwab Cup Championship | 2010 | Fred Couples | PGA Tour Champions event[4] |
| Charles Schwab Cup Championship | 2011 | David Duval | PGA Tour Champions event[4] |
| Charles Schwab Cup Championship | 2013 | Kenny Perry | PGA Tour Champions event; final season on course[4] |
| WGC-Cadillac Match Play | 2015 | Rory McIlroy | New 64-player format[44] |
| PGA Championship | 2020 | Collin Morikawa (−13) | Postponed major; first at TPC property[41] |
| Presidents Cup | 2025 | TBD | Upcoming team event[3] |