Although I feel this is primarily a thread best addressed by our participating designers, I am always a sucker for “growing the game” topics in general and especially those that try to characterize the golfing public—the average Joe golfer. First, thanks to the architects for giving us their time and insights. They are invaluable. Some random thoughts from a guy that runs a public golf course:
I think Ian’s comments about access, not architecture, is the most important factor in growing the game. Here at our course we put our money where our hearts are, so to speak. Kid’s pay $5 for weekday rounds during the summer, free on the weekends if playing with their paying parents, and we provide access for a couple of small HS golf teams. All of our cart kids are aspiring junior golfers and a few have gone on to be outstanding amateurs or club pros. Our pros teach golf classes for the local community college and work pro bono or at reduced rates to help promising juniors. Family season passes are very affordable. Does any of this pay off? I have no evidence that it does. Does it grow the game? Possibly, but one really couldn’t afford to do it at most places. If the course had that much open space on their tee sheets, they’d be down the tubes.
Sometimes I feel many of us amateur architecturistas lose perspective about what this site really is. We are a very elite collection of golf nuts that enjoy the intellectual banter with other like-minded and equally crazed golf whack-jobs. Yes, we are the cognoscente and, in my view, mostly out of touch the average golfer.
As I said a few days ago, 95% (or more) of my customers think good conditioning is good design and don’t know or don’t care about the difference. They couldn’t care less who designed a golf course. This is not a put-down or a criticism of these fine folks. They often can appreciate good design when they see it. They just don’t know why. They love this course and I hear every day that they play here because it is the best course in the region. I like to hear that, of course, but even I would rank just the course itself 4-5 on TD’s scale (the site, however, is very spectacular and unique). I realize I’m on the record as not being a ranking kind of guy and I’m not. Like my customers, I play golf for fun with my pals. Better yet if the course is in a really great landscape. The point I’m making is simply that a lot of the issues discussed here are not on the average golfer’s radar. Affordable golf is their highest priority.
I’ve posted about this course, Canyon Springs in Idaho, before, so you can do a search if you want to know more. For this thread it important to know that it is just a nice, affordable, rural golf course that is 35 years old that cost less than $1M to build back in the day. Imagine sandy, rolling terrain, push up greens, 6,800 yards, very walkable, cheaply maintained, and unpretentious in every way. Despite my obvious bias, I’d say that we are precisely the kind of minimal, but fun, uncrowded course that most folks want and, perhaps, even a few on this board would enjoy, especially at the $40 rack rate. Also reasonably challenging to the better player (we have 60-70 single digit club members) and very playable for everyone else (113 to 125 slope). That’s all good and well, but $1M today wouldn’t buy a sprinkler system. If we need more of these kinds of affordable courses to grow the game, it can’t be done. Nuzzo’s very intriguing Texas track was brilliantly implemented at a rock bottom price of $3M (I doubt that includes land cost, ask Mike). It seems to me that our participating architects may share many of the high-fallutin’ ideas about great golf expressed here, but they know what it costs and are the ultimate reality check.
So, you want a great course? It seems to me that an architect basically needs a rich, deep-pocketed developer/owner who is as nuts about golf as most of us. Hopefully, this guy has enough affluent customers to make it work or at least enough every day Joe’s and Jane’s to pack the tee sheet, and that creates a whole new set of problems to deal with. It’s a tough racket these days.
Was that a rant?