TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas
History
TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas was originally designed by Jay Morrish with legendary player consultants Byron Nelson and Ben Crenshaw and opened in 1983 within the Four Seasons Resort and Club at Las Colinas in Irving, Texas, between Dallas and Fort Worth. The course became home to the AT&T Byron Nelson Championship in 1986, beginning a celebrated two-decade run as one of the PGA Tour's most storied venues, honoring the legendary Byron Nelson himself. In 2008, the course underwent a comprehensive redesign by Champions Tour player and architect D.A. Weibring with Steve Wolfard, resulting in a lengthened, modernized par-70, 7,166-yard layout. The redesign emphasized spectator-friendly design with a dramatically revamped 18th hole — a dogleg left around a pond with waterfalls — and strengthened several key par-4s. The Byron Nelson event departed for Trinity Forest in 2018, but TPC Las Colinas remains a crown jewel of resort golf as part of what was the only AAA Five Diamond resort in Texas.
Signature Hole
18th hole, par 4, 429 yards — a dogleg left around a pond with cascading waterfalls, providing one of the most visually dramatic finishing holes in Texas resort golf
Notable Tournaments
- AT&T Byron Nelson Championship / HP Byron Nelson Championship (PGA Tour, 1986–2018)