North Las Vegas disc golf course reopens for full summer operations
North Las Vegas put the Municipal Par 3 Golf & Disc Golf Course back on full summer status, with play running until the heat hits 110 degrees or storms force a shutdown.

The Municipal Par 3 Golf & Disc Golf Course in North Las Vegas was back in full operations after the city said on June 17 that golfers and disc golfers could return under normal summer rules. In a desert market, the key number is 110 degrees Fahrenheit: once the temperature reaches that mark, or severe inclement weather arrives, the city will temporarily shut the course down.
That matters because this is not just one amenity tucked into a park. North Las Vegas describes the property as a 9-hole par 3 golf course paired with an 18-hole professional disc golf course, open seven days a week with advance reservations and walk-in play based on availability. The clubhouse, pro shop, food and drinks give the site the feel of a managed golf complex, and the city says the course at 324 East Brooks Ave. can also be reserved for private use. For players, full operations means the shared-use setup is active again, with both codes of golf working side by side.

The disc golf layout itself has a strong identity. UDisc and DiscGolfPark describe it as an 18-hole course built on a 9-hole ball golf course with elevation changes, while UDisc and the Professional Disc Golf Association directory note white and gold baskets that turn nine tees into 18 holes. UDisc lists the course as established in 2016. The golf side carries more history, with one directory saying the North Las Vegas Par 3 Golf Course opened in 1971 and was designed by Jack Walpole. That mix of old municipal golf bones and newer disc golf design is what makes the venue stand out in Nevada.
The city is not treating the course like a static field either. North Las Vegas says the Municipal Par 3 Golf & Disc Course hosts multiple tournaments throughout the year, and the calendar already showed a June 20, 2026 Tee for Tea Series event at the facility. The city also publicized a recurring Disc Golf Happy Hour on Sundays from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., a sign that the disc golf side is being programmed with regularity, not just left open for casual rounds.

Course-directory listings add more of the day-to-day detail players care about. Disc golf is available seven days a week when weather permits, some tee times require calling ahead, and the course offers night play under lights. In a city where heat can shut down outdoor sports fast, that kind of mixed schedule is the whole story: access when conditions allow, and a hard stop when the desert says enough.
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