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Brian_Ewen

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Golf course building costs soar
« on: November 28, 2008, 09:10:33 PM »
http://www.todaysgolfer.co.uk/Golf/News/searchresults/November-08/nov29-coursessurvey/?&R=EPI-25604

Golf course building costs soar...
By TG Courses Editor

28 November 2008


The cost of developing an 18-hole golf course has increased by more than 20% in the past three to five years.

That is the outcome of KPMG Golf Advisory Practice’s latest Golf Course Development Cost Survey for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
 
The report, a new, updated version of a study first conducted in 2005, shows that the design and construction costs (excluding investments related to land acquisition, clubhouse, maintenance equipment and cart fleet etc) of an 18-hole golf course now ranges between €1.5 and €5.3 million in Europe, depending on location and quality, €5.1 million in Southern Africa, and €9.5 million in the Middle East, by far the most expensive region to develop a golf course.
 
Andrea Sartori, head of KPMG’s Golf Advisory Practice in the EMA, said: “The Middle East features the highest concentration of new, high-end and signature golf courses, designed by recognized golf course architects and famous professional golfers, who may command higher fees, but whose celebrity also beneficially increases premiums on real estate surrounding the course by more than 10%.”
 
The report, based on a sample of more than 150 courses in 27 different countries, features data collected in 2008 from new courses, where the trend is towards housing communities and tourist resorts, as well as extensions to existing courses, typically in established markets such as Great Britain and Ireland.
 
The average cost of an 18-hole course varies according to quality, with a lower to mid-quality course costing, on average, between €2.2 million and €3.0 million, high-end €5.9 million, and a signature course €6.8 million.
 
In Europe, the average development costs for 18-hole courses vary from €1.5 million in Eastern Europe, €2.6 million in Northern Europe, €2.7 million in Central Europe, €3.9 million in Great Britain and Ireland, to €5.3 million in Western Europe.
 
While the costs are highest in the Middle East (€9.5 million), partly because of the focus on high-end and signature courses, which tend to be 2 to 2.5 times more expensive to construct, golf course revenues and profits in this region are also substantially higher (average revenues top €5 million per annum, with gross operating profits of more than 30%, according to the KPMG Golf Benchmark Survey 2007).
 
The cost of developing a course combines pre-construction costs (11%), including planning permits and course design fees, plus construction costs (89%), including earthwork, irrigation, grassing and landscaping, but excluding land acquisition and investment in other facilities and golf course maintenance equipment.
 
Of the developments surveyed, 42% were connected to a tourist resort or real estate community. All of these respondents said they had achieved a premium on the sale of their real estate units as a result of their golf course, with 60% saying it was worth over 20% more compared to comparable non-golf course homes in the locality.
 
Three-quarters of developments with a recognized golf course architect said having a named architect further increased premiums on their real estate sales, just under half saying this was worth more than 10%, although a third said it was below 5%.

Meanwhile, all developments with a signature designer experienced premiums on their real estate sales, generally above 10%.
 
Andrea Sartori added: “The architects were also asked where they thought the next golf development hot spots would be and were asked to name the five markets likely to experience the most significant growth in golf course development in the next 10 years.

"China (58%) and Eastern Europe (55%) topped the list by some distance, with the United Arab Emirates (43%), India (42%) and Russia (30%) making up the top five."

 Other findings of the report include:
• it usually takes four to five years to construct a golf course from concept to realization, although planning permission can take anywhere between a few months, as it often does in the Middle East, to two or three years, in Northern Europe
• obtaining a planning permit (mentioned by 36% of the respondents) is the single most difficult issue to overcome in golf course development, followed by weather delays (28%) and environmental opposition (24%).
• earthwork and shaping account for 33% of construction costs, irrigation and drainage 21% and cart paths 15%
• 61% of developers stick to their budget for golf course construction, but a third overspent, 10% by a significant amount.

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +2/-1
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #1 on: November 28, 2008, 09:32:39 PM »
The cause of rising costs may well be experts like KPMG telling new developers how much they ought to be spending ...

cary lichtenstein

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #2 on: November 28, 2008, 10:13:37 PM »
The only thing soaring in the next 3 to 5 years will be the number of foreclosures
Live Jupiter, Fl, was  4 handicap, played top 100 US, top 75 World. Great memories, no longer play, 4 back surgeries. I don't miss a lot of things about golf, life is simpler with out it. I miss my 60 degree wedge shots, don't miss nasty weather, icing, back spasms. Last course I played was Augusta

Don_Mahaffey

Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #3 on: November 28, 2008, 10:23:25 PM »
Fuel, PVC, Copper are all as low as they've been in 18 -24 months. Throw in the fact there is no domestic work going on and I'm guessing I could work deals on concrete, labor (including skilled labor), equipment rentals...and (gasp) design fees.

If you've got the money and a long term focus, now is a great time to build. 

The study is old news...but then most studies are old news.

Matt_Cohn

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #4 on: November 28, 2008, 10:25:48 PM »
Cart paths are 15% of construction costs? Yikes.

John Moore II

Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #5 on: November 28, 2008, 10:54:36 PM »
Cart paths are 15% of construction costs? Yikes.

They very well may be. I just did a quick calculation, where a cart path might be 4 feet wide and 10000 yards of total length. Now I haven't bought and poured concrete in about 6 years, but I figured that the total cost based on that just for the concrete would be about $140,000. Add in labor to make the forms and smoothing, etc. and you likely double that. So, yeah, it might be about 15%. Say $300,000 for paths and on the ratio of 15%, you'd have a total cost of $2 million in the course. Plus, the cost per yard of concrete I used was what I was paying 5-6 years ago, so I am sure now its higher.

Scott Stambaugh

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #6 on: November 28, 2008, 11:00:32 PM »
Cart paths are 15% of construction costs? Yikes.

They very well may be. I just did a quick calculation, where a cart path might be 4 feet wide and 10000 yards of total length. Now I haven't bought and poured concrete in about 6 years, but I figured that the total cost based on that just for the concrete would be about $140,000. Add in labor to make the forms and smoothing, etc. and you likely double that. So, yeah, it might be about 15%. Say $300,000 for paths and on the ratio of 15%, you'd have a total cost of $2 million in the course. Plus, the cost per yard of concrete I used was what I was paying 5-6 years ago, so I am sure now its higher.

4' wide?  Really?

John Moore II

Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #7 on: November 28, 2008, 11:07:38 PM »
Cart paths are 15% of construction costs? Yikes.

They very well may be. I just did a quick calculation, where a cart path might be 4 feet wide and 10000 yards of total length. Now I haven't bought and poured concrete in about 6 years, but I figured that the total cost based on that just for the concrete would be about $140,000. Add in labor to make the forms and smoothing, etc. and you likely double that. So, yeah, it might be about 15%. Say $300,000 for paths and on the ratio of 15%, you'd have a total cost of $2 million in the course. Plus, the cost per yard of concrete I used was what I was paying 5-6 years ago, so I am sure now its higher.

4' wide?  Really?


Well, 4' is about the size of a typical sidewalk, so thats as small as you could make a cart path. If you go out to 5' wide, I would estimate the costs at about $340k and if you go to 8' the cost estimate is about $540k. But either way, the numbers are very high.

Mike_Young

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #8 on: November 28, 2008, 11:20:57 PM »
I don't think you will find a path less than 6 ft wide and closer to 8 ft wide.....
a yard of concrete will pave 10 ft of path 8 ft wide.....4 inches thick.....the 15% figure is probably for some hyped up job with all curb etc.....
if one was building 28000 ft of path 8 ft wide .....would need 2800 cu yards at $75= 210,000 dollars...labor would be about .70 per sq ft or 5.60 per linear ft=156,800 and clean up and tiie in at 1.50 linear ft would be 42,000 for a total of  $408,800......but things like coloring, stones, curbing and etc can add to it....subtract 1/8 of that number for each ft of width one deletes.
"just standing on a corner in Winslow Arizona"

David Lott

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #9 on: November 28, 2008, 11:40:02 PM »
Check back in a couple of years and see how these super expensive courses are doing. Save your pennies and find some rich associates. There may be a few for sale at lower prices.
David Lott

John Moore II

Re: Golf course building costs soar
« Reply #10 on: November 29, 2008, 12:32:28 PM »
I don't think you will find a path less than 6 ft wide and closer to 8 ft wide.....
a yard of concrete will pave 10 ft of path 8 ft wide.....4 inches thick.....the 15% figure is probably for some hyped up job with all curb etc.....
if one was building 28000 ft of path 8 ft wide .....would need 2800 cu yards at $75= 210,000 dollars...labor would be about .70 per sq ft or 5.60 per linear ft=156,800 and clean up and tiie in at 1.50 linear ft would be 42,000 for a total of  $408,800......but things like coloring, stones, curbing and etc can add to it....subtract 1/8 of that number for each ft of width one deletes.

I used $100 per yard as my number. Like I said, I am not sure what concrete costs anymore. But I seem to remember paying in the $90 range 6 years ago, the last time I poured a slab for a garage. I could be wrong though.

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