Looking worldwide there are two courses in Sweden that can be seen as professionally designed, maintained and operated solely on their own. Järva Discgolf Park in Stockholm and Discgolfterminalen in Skellefteå.
Järva is run by a company and Discgolfterminalen is run by a club.
Both are 27-hole pay to play courses put in areas that has been remaked to be discgolfcourses.
Järva has refined a wild nature/park area which includes cutting out fairways, improve existing grass areas, cleaning the area from litter etc, etc. The course has a ground crew, there is a discgolfshop, a restaurant, driving range, short hole course and practise baskets.
Discgolfterminalen has cut out fairways, improved the ground with better soil since some of the ground was swamp (hundreds of truck loads) sawing new fairways etc. Here you can find a clubhouse, with discgolf shop, cafeteria and also lodging. The course has also a ground crew.
The courses are open all the time, but it is kind of difficult to play through the wintermonths.
Both courses has there own big lawnmovers that cut the grass regularly.
Both courses use the land from the community for free since the land has no higher value and since a recreation opportunity is offered to the community.
The courses are not ball golf style, but discgolf style trying to be better than the ordinary course.
They are also much more environmental friendly than ball golf courses. No watering, no pesticides, no fertilizers, not cutting the whole course every day (maybe just once a week at the most)
Most of the visitors are recreation players but the courses do have layout for the biggest events. Discgolfterminalen was the place for the major Scandinavian Open and Järva Discgolf Park is the place for the Stockholm Discgolf Open.
http://www.dgcoursereview.com/course.php?id=2338
http://www.dgcoursereview.com/course.php?id=2322