Sand Hills
Pacific Dunes
Whistling Straits
Bandon Dunes
Ballyneal
Sebonack
The Ocean Course at Kiawah
Kingsley Club
So much of modern golf design construction has focused on three types of courses: residential courses, remote “retreat/resort” courses, and restorations. In looking at the best modern courses in the United States, I’m hard pressed to find one that was built in the recent past that has been within 10 miles of a major metropolitan area that has not been tied to residential sales and would be considered “golf only.”
Obviously the cost of the land is the major factor in planning and building a successful golf facility, and either a resort or residential lots are generally needed to recoup the cost of the land. (And with the current economic situation residential developments are next to impossible to pull off). Either that or a developer must go out in search of quality land that is remote and less expensive.
My point is that there now seems to be no middle ground, and that the great classic clubs where a club (granted remote at the time) was formed around a golf course and a golfing membership with little or no residential home site is no longer a viable option.
Many new projects close to metropolitan areas are built on landfills, industrial sites, or old airfields, and each feature their own design issues. For example, long cart rides and unwalkable designs, undesirable views, etc…
So, what’s next for golf course architecture in the various metropolitan areas across the country and world? Is new design dead as we know it? Will another great golf course be built within a metropolitan area ever again? Can a top-10 golf course be built on an old landfill, an abandoned industrial site and the like or are the obstacles too big? Will the future in design be in restoration? Or in economic development as it was at East Lake in ATL and Harbor Shores in Michigan?