From today's Desert Sun:
Designer returns for more desert course work
Larry Bohannan
The Desert Sun
February 6, 2005
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Tom Fazio would love to come to the desert to play golf, but his work keeps getting in the way.
"Here I am with all these great places, and I'd love to just stay a week and play golf," Fazio said. "But I have to go home and go to some other projects."
Fazio's visits to the desert may be short, but they tend to result in more golf for other players. One of the busiest and most respected golf architects in the country, Fazio's credits in the desert include both courses at The Vintage Club, the highly ranked Quarry at La Quinta, the popular Canyons Course at Bighorn and the re-design of Eldorado, which rather than a renovation is really a new golf course on the existing routing.
Fazio already has his next course in the area in the works. The Madison Club, developed by Discovery Land, will break ground sometime in March in La Quinta, just east of The Hideaway between Avenue 52 and Avenue 54.
High-end courses
The Madison Club, with 18 holes of golf and about 220 home sites, will be another private, real estate-driven course for Fazio in the desert. While that's all he's done in the desert, he says he's not adverse to doing other kinds of developments, as long as they have the same fundamentals as his other desert courses.
"The common theme with these courses in the desert is that there was the highest commitment for golf, the game of golf," Fazio said. That commitment from the developer, such as Mick Humphries at The Vintage Club and Bill Morrow at The Quarry, allowed Fazio to do the work that turned The Vintage into the desert standard for high-profile private golf, or The Quarry into the desert's only course on Golf Digest's most recent top 100.
With the last of his six children now in college, Fazio allows himself more West Coast work, such as a course he just finished in Las Vegas for developer Steve Wynn.
Even with his reputation well-established by courses like the ones he's done in the desert, Fazio carries the slight anxiety that design is a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately business.
"If I never designed another golf course in this valley, I could retire and live off the laurels of The Vintage Club and the Quarry and Canyons and Eldorado," Fazio said. "That would be great, and I would be satisfied with that. But the minute we put the shovel in the ground at The Madison Club, there's the expectation level. What's that going to be like?"