Brookstone Golf and Country Club
5705 Brookstone Dr NW, Acworth, GA 30101Designed by Larry Nelson · Est. 1988
Brookstone Golf and Country Club is a private 18-hole course in Acworth, Georgia, designed by PGA Tour champion and Ryder Cup player Larry Nelson with Jeff Brauer and opened in 1988. Set in the foothills of the North Georgia Mountains, the course features rolling Bermuda fairways, strategically positioned bunkers, and large bentgrass greens that challenge players at every level.
History
Brookstone Golf & Country Club opened in 1988 in Acworth, Georgia, situated in the rolling foothills of Cobb County roughly 30 miles northwest of Atlanta. The course was designed by PGA Tour champion Larry Nelson in collaboration with architect Jeff Brauer, making it one of relatively few golf facilities in the Southeast to bear the design imprint of a multiple major championship winner. Nelson won three major titles — the 1981 and 1987 PGA Championships and the 1983 U.S. Open — and brought a playing champion's sensibility to the routing, emphasizing strategic challenges that reward smart course management rather than raw length alone. The 18-hole layout plays to 6,815 yards at par 72, carrying a course rating of 73.3 and a slope of 133 from the back tees. Bermuda grass fairways wind through mature stands of hardwood and pine, with the natural contours of the North Georgia foothills creating significant elevation changes across the property.
Multiple tee positions on each hole widen the course's accessibility, allowing players of varied handicap levels to find an appropriate and enjoyable challenge. Brookstone is managed by Invited, formerly ClubCorp, the nationwide private club management company. The club's amenities extend well beyond golf and include tennis, dining, and fitness facilities that together create a full-service country club environment for its membership in Cherokee and Cobb County communities.
The club has hosted Georgia PGA section events and serves as a regular venue for corporate and member-guest tournaments throughout the year. The property's setting in the transitional zone between Atlanta's urban suburbs and the more rural Cherokee County landscape gives the course a quieter, less congested feel than many clubs closer to the city center. Undulating fairways, manicured Bermuda turf, and the surrounding tree canopy give Brookstone a classic private club character that reflects both Nelson's competitive instincts and Brauer's technical design background.