Very difficult not to be impressed with C&C -- thoughtful golf tradition-sensitive designs and they both appear to be humble and philanthropic -- see below.
How common is this (zero profit) endeavour in the golf design biz?
Coore & Crenshaw Takes “Zero Profit” Job to Design Trinity Forest GC (Dallas)
January 14, 2013
The 18-hole championship course for an exclusive new club that is being planned for one of the poorest sections of Dallas is being touted as a win-win for the city’s golf community, as well as for its economic revival.
Coore & Crenshaw, the Austin, Texas-based golf course architecture firm headed by Bill Coore and two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw, has been selected to direct the design of the proposed Trinity Forest Golf Course, according to a golf blog posting in the Dallas Morning News.
Trinity Forest, a project being led by AT&T and Southern Methodist University, will feature an 18-hole championship course built on 400 acres of city-owned land in south Dallas, one of the city’s poorest sections. Backers of the project say they want to have the new course bring the Byron Nelson Championship, currently sponsored by HP and scheduled to be played in May 2013 at the TPC Four Seasons Resort Las Colinas in the Dallas suburb of Irving, where it has been played since 1983, into the city. AT&T will become the tournament’s title sponsor in 2015.
Project backers, which include Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings, also tout the development of Trinity Forest as a key to the economic revival of that part of the city (
http://www.clubandresortbusiness.com/2012/12/10/south-dallas-texas-plans-golf-course/).
The course will be privately owned by a non-profit organization that will lease land from the city, the Morning News reported, and then sell memberships that are expected to be “pricey and exclusive.”
Many golf course architectural firms expressed interest in doing the design, which will convert an old and unused landfill site along the Trinity River, despite AT&T senior vice president Ron Spears’ insistence in an interview with the Morning News that the firm selected won’t be able to make a profit on the job. In announcing that Coore & Crenshaw had been selected, Carol Reed, a spokeswoman for the project, said the firm would abide by the zero-profit terms Spears laid out.
The course is expected to open by 2016, which the Morning News saw as an indication that much of the initial planning about who the designer might be had already been discussed before a public announcement about the course was made.
In a brief statement, Crenshaw said it was an honor to be selected, while his partner reflected on the site itself.
“The site is interesting; it has great character and is inherently appealing for classic golf. It has the potential to yield an outstanding golf course,” said Bill Coore.
Courses designed by Coore & Crenshaw include Bandon Trails and Bandon Preserve in Oregon, Friar’s Head Golf Club on New York’s Long Island, Streamsong Resort in Florida, Austin (Texas) Golf Club and The Sand Hills Golf Club in Nebraska. The firm was also involved in the recent restoration of the Donald Ross-designed Pinehurst #2 in North Carolina, site of the 2014 U.S. Open.