Achasta Clubhouse — the heart of the community
A 22,000-square-foot timber-and-stone gathering house at the center of the fairway plan — the building where members meet, eat, train, and trade waves before tee time.
The Achasta Clubhouse is a 22,000-square-foot timber and stone gathering house.
The clubhouse sits on the ridge above the practice range and overlooks the back nine — the natural visual anchor of the entire community plan. From most fairway-frontage homes inside the gates, you can see the gabled roofline through the hardwood canopy. The building reads as part lodge, part Southern country house: stacked Appalachian stone at the base, board-and-batten and shake siding above, copper accents on the chimneys and the porte-cochère, full-height arched windows along the long axis. The architecture leans deliberately rustic-residential rather than the colder corporate-club aesthetic.
Inside, the floor plan is organized around a central great room with a vaulted timber-truss ceiling and a double-sided stacked-stone fireplace that runs floor to ceiling. From that hub, the building unfolds outward: dining hall and grill bar to one side, members’ lounge and pro shop to the other, locker rooms and fitness on the lower level, private event rooms and the bridal suite tucked behind the dining wing. The whole layout was designed so that members can move between golf, fitness, dining, and event functions without ever leaving the building — useful in mountain weather.
“The clubhouse is the social spine of Achasta. Every community ritual — member dinners, holiday gatherings, junior camps, the annual member-guest — happens inside this one building.”
Clubhouse access depends on which tier you’re in.
Buying a home inside Achasta does not automatically grant clubhouse privileges — the building belongs to the membership organization, not the HOA. Three access tiers below; current dollar figures should be confirmed with the membership office before any decision.
The social membership.
Full access to the clubhouse, dining, members’ bar, fitness center, pool, and racquet facilities — no golf course privileges. The right tier for buyers who want the social hub, the fitness facility, and the dining room without the cost of golf. Initiation is the lowest of the three tiers; monthly dues and a food-and-beverage minimum apply.
The sport / racquet tier.
Adds priority pool reservations, tennis court time, and the fitness programming layer (clinics, classes, personal training). Still no unlimited golf, but typically includes a limited number of guest rounds per season at member rate. Useful for families whose center of gravity is the racquet and pool program rather than the course.
The full-golf membership.
Unlimited course play, locker assignment, bag storage, advance tee-time priority, member-guest eligibility — plus every social and racquet privilege. Highest initiation by a meaningful step. Cap-and-wait status may apply to this tier in some quarters; confirm in writing before any home purchase that relies on full-golf availability.
Eight facilities. One building.
What is actually inside the Achasta Clubhouse — eight distinct rooms and programs that operate under one roof, organized roughly in the order you encounter them on a member tour.
Vaulted timber-truss ceiling, stacked Appalachian stone fireplace running floor to ceiling, leather club chairs and Persian rugs. The room that anchors every member ritual — cocktail hours, December tree lighting, the annual member meeting. Seats roughly 80 for a stand-up reception.
A long timber bar with bourbon-forward back-bar and bar-side seating for roughly twelve. Open before lunch, through dinner, and to last call on event nights. The unofficial post-round room — cart bags parked, golf shoes on, scorecards out.
Table service for roughly seventy-plus seats across the main dining hall and an adjacent porch dining wing. Full menu detail lives on the Achasta Grill page — this room is the architectural envelope around that program.
Soft goods (logoed apparel, hats, gloves), hard goods (a working club rack, balls, accessories), and the front-desk function for the course — tee-time check-in, cart key issuance, range tokens. The head professional and assistants are based here.
Lower-level wood-trimmed lockers with assigned storage for full-golf members, sit-down showers, towel service, and a small adjacent card-and-grill room for post-round lunches. Each side has its own card-game tradition with regular standing groups.
Cardio (treadmill, bike, rower, elliptical), free-weight rack, selectorized strength, and a small group-class studio. Hours run early-morning through evening daily; personal training is bookable through the desk. Quieter than commercial gyms because access is members-only.
Two semi-private rooms off the dining wing, each seating roughly 20–30. Used for member rehearsal dinners, business dinners, holiday family meals, board meetings, and the bridal suite for the occasional clubhouse wedding. Bookable through the clubhouse office on a calendar basis.
Two wraparound timber porches overlook the practice range and the finishing hole. Outdoor dining in shoulder seasons, the favored cocktail spot in summer, the natural overflow when the great room is full. Ceiling fans, fireplaces, retractable screens — usable nine months a year.
“This isn’t a building you visit once a month for an event — for a full-tier member, it’s a second living room.”
From a 12-year Achasta clubhouse member
Walk the clubhouse before you sign anything.
The clubhouse is the building that decides whether Achasta feels like home or just looks like it. Gold Peach Realty coordinates clubhouse tours alongside every home showing inside the gates — same advisor, same visit. Ask for the current membership packet and the cap-and-wait status in writing before you commit.
By phone · weekdays 9-6 (770) 283-1223