While in college , I worked at a cool little course that was fun to play , cheap to build & EZ to maintain. Here are the highlights :
- 9 Greens
- Front Nine Tees & Back Nine Tees gave us an 18 Hole course ( Hole might be a short Par 4 on the front nine , on the back it might play as a Par 3 , long par 4 , par 5 , maybe from a different angle.
- Greens were relatively small , but could be mowed with a triplex
- Tees were minimally elevated and tee surrounds were large enough to turn a 5 gang
- Green surrounds were mild enough and sheet flowed well enough to mow around with a 5 gang
- Bunker edges were mild enough to mow with that same 5 gang
- Bunker had flat bottoms so we never threw sand after a rain
- If you had to , you could mow the whole place with a 5 gang and a triplex
- The Pro was also the GM , Accountant , Sales Team , Superintendent , Mechanic ... It was just Him and a few PT college kids who kept the whole place going.
If I were to do a course like that today , I would :
- use a little more land and focus on angles from the various tee options
- simplify bunkers / minimize bunker sq footage
- if at all possible , sheet flow the drainage , avoid internal drainage when possible
- greens designed with lots of movement so that they are interesting without resorting to warp speed
- spend extra shaping hours on shaping , shaping , shaping to create interesting golf without lots of bunkers
- small clubhouse with porch , place to pay your fees , snack bar with small seating area and a small changing room / bathroom
- small and simple maintenance shop
- 40 primary parking spaces in asphalt / concrete and another 40 overflow parking in well defined , well drained , closely mown turf
- clearly articulate a vision of affordable golf that includes details of why we did everything we did
We had a blast playing at that little course , I wish I had the bucks to develop it and see what kind of revenue we could do in today's market.