San Antonio Country Club gets renovations
By Raul Dominguez Jr.
12/2/2004
Source: San Antonio Express-News (Texas)
The San Antonio Country Club will close its course for about nine months beginning in January for a major renovation.
Brian Silva, who was GolfWorld's Architect of the Year for 1999, will redesign the greens and bunkers at San Antonio's oldest private facility.
"It will give our members a different look," S.A. Country Club head pro Chuck Westergard said of the redesign.
"It's going to give us more of an old-style golf course. It had been modernized through some of new renovations. (Silva) is bringing it back to more of an old style as far as the green and bunker complexes are concerned."
Silva also renovated the Donald Ross-designed Hope Valley Country Club in Durham, N.C., among other properties.
The S.A. Country Club opened in 1907 under the design of Alex Findlay. The course has since undergone three renovations of varying degrees - by A.W. Tillinghast in the late 1920s, Joe Finger in 1957 and Jay Morrish in 1986.
Tee boxes will be added on the third and fourth holes and the tee boxes will be moved back on other holes, giving the course an additional 100 to 150 yards once the redesign is completed.
TifEagle, a Bermuda grass hybrid, will be used on the redesigned greens.
The fairways will maintain their design, but the common Bermuda will be replaced with TifSport. In addition, the course's irrigation system will be replaced.
"We are improving the technology as far as the grasses is concerned and the irrigation," Westergard said. "It really hadn't been done before. We have done some minor work, but we really hadn't done anything to the course in 50 years, so technology passed it up.
"The main thing is it's going to make maintenance a lot easier."
The facility began eliminating the common Bermuda on its fairways in August through maintenance procedures.