I don't see how the logistics of getting to and from the venue can be improved. It is a residential community with a winding two lane road, And because of the residential nature of the entire island it is a solid 20 minutes even by car to get from the main gate all the way out to the Ocean course.
I would be very curious to hear of a very clever solution to get spectators, fans, media, etc. out to the venue without all the inherent hassles that have been discussed in detail over the last few days.
Building or expanding the roads is not the solution. No, there is no perfect solution. But we can likely agree that fewer cars traveling on Maybank Highway and Bohicket Road to/from Charleston would result in a faster commute.
How to accomplish this? Eliminate Kiawah's Freshfields Village as the central location for spectator parking. Instead, designate a sizable paved parking lot on the mainland such as the North Charleston Coliseum where people can park and access shuttles. Sure, it's a 37-mile ride from there to the gate at TOC and it will take an hour drive. That's still a faster drive than spectators (and media) faced last week.
For the deep pockets/sponsors who have a home or are renting on Kiawah and Seabrook Islands, run a couple shuttles from those locations. For those who live south of Kiawah or the neighboring barrier islands, perhaps the PGA finds an option for them but it's not a prerequisite.
A case study example is how the USGA effectively managed shuttles for the 2008 US Open at Torrey Pines. Spectators parked at Qualcomm Stadium and shuttles traveled the 17 miles north to La Jolla. I don't believe there was another parking option for those who were not in close proximity to San Diego. Similarly, for this year's US Open, Candlestick Park served as the designated parking/shuttle location.
I'd be interested to learn why the PGA/Kiawah didn't go with this solution this year. Did they run/sponsor a related study? For all I know, it's what Sports Illustrated's Gary Van Sickle reports:
"The traffic was the worst I've seen at a major since the 1984 U.S. Open at Winged Foot, where a number of players abandoned their cars and made a run for the course with their clubs slung over their shoulders. This traffic failure seemed to be based on Kiawah officials' desire to collect $20 a day in parking for thousands of cars that should've been parked on the mainland, where the other shuttles ran."http://www.golf.com/tour-and-news/pga-championship-logistics-kiawah-island-were-uglyGary also reports that the PGA/Kiawah also levied a $20 fee to cabs that dropped people off at TOC. Rediculous.
https://twitter.com/GaryVanSickle/status/234381614463979520