Driving down Iliff Avenue, the entrance’s lackluster appearance is the first thing you notice. There isn’t a grand gate, a well-kept stone sign, or a valet posing as someone who knows you. Tucked away in a residential area of Southern Denver, Harvard Gulch Golf Course appears more like a neighborhood park than a location where golf is played. Perhaps that’s the whole point.
In 1982, when Denver was a different city and golf was a different game, this nine-hole par-3 course was constructed. It has endured four decades of real estate booms, trend cycles, and the gradual corporatization of almost everything else. You can complete a round in about the same amount of time as watching a sitcom because the holes range in length from 64 to 134 yards. In 2026, when the majority of public courses seem determined to test your patience and your pocketbook simultaneously, there’s something almost defiant about that.
You begin picking up little things as you stroll around the property. Long shadows are cast across narrow fairways by the towering trees, which are older than the course itself. Small and obstinate, the greens are surrounded by bunkers that penalize arrogance. On a few holes, water plays a role, just enough to cause a novice to change their club choice. Locals will tell you that your scorecard is determined by the fifth hole, which is the longest. It’s also the most beautiful, depending on who you ask.
Who shows up here is what’s interesting. Fathers teaching their daughters how to hold a wedge, retirees strolling with vintage leather bags, and nearby DU college students passing the time in between classes are all visible. The place has a quiet democracy that seems more and more uncommon. The only required attire is a shirt and shoes. No unwritten rules about who belongs, no mandate for collared polo.

The PGA Head Professional, Alan Hoover, exudes a presence that suggests he has seen every kind of golfer enter these gates. He doesn’t promote the course excessively. He is not required to. Because Harvard Gulch does one thing exceptionally well—making the game approachable without making it feel small—people keep returning. Nine holes can be completed by beginners without embarrassment. Good players can improve their short game. It’s more than you can say for a four-hour slog at some bloated regulation course on the outskirts of the city—everyone leaves having actually played golf.
Harvard Gulch may have survived because it never attempted to be anything more than what it is. Courses in Denver are more eye-catching. Compared to some restaurants in Manhattan, its private clubs have longer waiting lists. However, as you walk off the ninth green right before dusk, you get the impression that something here is worth defending. Over the gulch, the light softens. Somebody’s child lights up after hitting a good chip. Retirees tip their caps. For a moment, it seems as though everyone still owns the game.
It’s unclear if that will continue. Everywhere in America, there is quiet pressure on municipal golf. But for the time being, Harvard Gulch remains—small, tenacious, and unyielding.
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