Parkdly Partners with the Paul McBeth Foundation to Support Disc Golf Development in Rwanda

Lauri Alasaukko-oja
Lauri Alasaukko-oja
Published on 9 February 2026
Paul Mcbeth Parkdly

Parkdly is proud to announce a new partnership with the Paul McBeth Foundation, launching with a project at the Nyandungu Eco-Park Disc Golf Course in Kigali, Rwanda.

As part of the collaboration, Parkdly has designed the course’s tee signs and full course map, using Parkdly’s digital course design tools. The signage and map are now in use at Nyandungu Eco-Park, supporting both local players and visitors with clear, professional, and easy-to-understand course information.

All tee signs and the course map were designed by Parkdly and delivered in a print-ready format, allowing the Foundation to handle production locally while maintaining a consistent and high-quality visual standard.

The project also includes a digital course map, giving players mobile access to the full course layout, hole distances, and navigation throughout the park. You can see the tee sign of the first fairway below and the whole digital signage here.

Paul McBeth Foundation Tee sign

This partnership marks the beginning of a collaboration between Parkdly and the Paul McBeth Foundation. To support future projects, Parkdly has created a custom template and visual theme specifically for the Foundation within the Parkdly Studio. This enables efficient production of consistent course materials across multiple locations and projects worldwide.

“One of our long-term goals is to create sustainable, repeatable models for disc golf development around the world. Partnering with Parkdly allows us to bring consistency and professionalism to our projects, no matter where they’re located.” says Zachary Smith, Executive Director of the Paul McBeth Foundation.

“We’re proud to support the Paul McBeth Foundation’s work in Rwanda. Our goal at Parkdly is to help create more and better disc golf courses around the world, and an important part of that is making sure that when someone arrives at a course for the first time, the signage is clear, welcoming, and visually appealing. Partnering with the Paul McBeth Foundation is a perfect match, as we share the same ambition to grow the sport through high-quality course infrastructure,” says Lauri Alasaukko-oja, Co-Founder of Parkdly.

The Nyandungu Eco-Park Disc Golf Course is part of the Paul McBeth Foundation’s broader mission to grow disc golf in developing regions and use the sport as a tool for community building, education, and long-term impact. For Parkdly, the project represents an important step in supporting global disc golf development through scalable, modern course design solutions.