After the thread on construction costs of a golf course I decided to write a very quick post about costs of construction and a wonder on what has happened since Colt died:
In my short years as a golf course designer/architect I have met quite a few people that have influenced those and me that influenced me not so much. My mentors include Jeff Brauer who posts on this site a lot, Jeremy Turner who is my business partner and knows more about British golf than any other man I met in my life. Others that have I have had the honour to meet and discuss architecture are Tom Doak, Bill Coore, Ben Crenshaw, Jim Urbina, David Kidd (most of which I met at Sand Hills this year), the list goes on. Does this mean I know anything about GCA, probably not?
One thing I do know a bit about is construction. I will give a bit of my background. I left home when I was 18 and bought my first house with 2 other guys who were also fed up of hiring dead money on rent payments. I started off in insurance (same as some other architect called Dye) but joined the Royal Engineers to become a Land Surveyor, which I did in various countries including Norway. I met my now wife in Norway and I left the Army and have settled there. I then joined the largest Norwegian construction company Veidekke. I have been involved in everything from building tunnels under the sea to get to the end of Europe in the North Cape to constructing a multi-storey car park under the Oslo fjord. Most of you might be thinking – ‘get on with it Brian, what is your point’.
Well, I started the golf course construction division in the company and they have now become one of the short listed companies for all Architects in Norway. I left the company and I am now a partner with Jeremy in our company Turner Phillips Golf Design DA.
My point is why does construction of golf courses cost so much in America? One of my really annoying construction costs is irrigation. Now Dave Wilbur may rip me apart on this subject but do we really need this satellite irrigation that costs so much in the US? Why the hell do you need $1 million to $2 million irrigation installation costs?
In Norway which has an average labour cost per hour of $21.00 per hour and we still manage to deliver irrigation that hardly ever comes over $400,000 ex. Taxes. I just can’t get my head around the figures that are quoted in the US. Tom Doak was talking about $2 million at Texas just for the irrigation!!
We have been involved in a course this year which I feel is a reasonable 18 hole golf course that would live up to Aronimink and Gulph Mills (both of which I visited this year and are good courses) and the total cost for construction (including USGA greens which I controlled myself) was $3.47 million including irrigation and taxes.
Are we constructing at too low prices and accepting that perfection is not achievable? Yes, I think we are. Are the likes of Doak, Hanse, C&C, Shackelford etc managing to achieve medium budgets with quality? I don’t know as I don’t know any of the budgets in their projects.
I have heard the figures for Kingsbarns and how much that cost. Would I have let a European architect on that site with the budget that Parsinen and Co. was allowing..NO WAY.
The sad thing in Europe at the moment is that there are NO architects anywhere near the ability of the really good architects in the US. NONE!!! Yet most of the architects mentioned above have ALL studied the British Isles. Doak had studying through a grant. Hanse also the same but also spent time with the Hawtree Dynasty. Crenshaw and Coore are both students of the Scottish game. Most architects that love the game come to these isles to study the architecture.
Why has no European architect really produced anything worth talking about in a positive fashion? Is it because no architect in Europe can really be trusted with a good budget to create anything unique? What has Europe really produced in architecture in the last 50 years? A Dave Thomas/Peter Allis Belfry, a European Golf Design Woburn?
Can anyone answer this long question, are construction budgets in America way too high and why has no European architect produced anything worth putting on the world top 100 for the last 50 years?
Regards
Brian Phillips