If your golf course is in good condition with single row irrigation down the middle of your fairways; if your fairways do have grass(which typically meets membership standards) with overseeded rye during the non-summer months and common bermuda during the summer; then why would you spend approximately 500 grand to construct double-row irrigation. Exactly, how does double-row irrigation improve your golf course?
I have heard of the following rationales: "Weed control" in the rough is one, but that is not a compelling argument.
The next rationale has many ironies: If you have single row irrigation down the center of your fairways, then you can actually alter your rough lines "in house" as you see fit. However, if you have double-row irrigation constructed down your rough lines, then the location, routing and width of your fairways will be set and permanent.
This brings up different issues though. Now you have to determine the architects' original fairway routings in order to reasonably know where to construct both rows of waterlines. Any variation would constitute a renovation instead of a restoration. As soon as the location and routing of the fairways are established, the width of the fairways must be determined. Well, the classic design maintained wide-open playing areas. Inevitably, if you follow the architects original fairway widths, wouldn't you therefore render the double-row irrigation useless?
The entire idea of double-row irrigation appears to me to be another attempt to narrow the playing area, to make this playing area green, greener, lush and plush, and consequently makes a classic design play more and more like the modern point-and-shoot courses where the required shot must be long and restricted to the dead center.
As always, the double-row irrigation product will be sold to our membership on an agronomic basis while the real reason is just another attempt to create a "championship" course which protects par according to the modern perception.
Someone teach me otherwise?