undertake an upgrade ?
I was recently talking to an old friend whom I hadn't seen in a number of years.
He informed me that he tendered his resignation to a club he's belonged to for 30+ years.
He lives less than 5 minutes from that club.
I asked him why he left.
He indicated that the club had gotten very expensive and that it had significant debt.
And, that he wasn't playing as often as he used to.
(Age can do that to you)
And, that there were a good number of public access courses within a half an hour to an hour's drive from his home.
Other friends were members of Shackamaxon, which is experiencing membership problems, some members are leaving, some are applying to other clubs.
The more I thought about it, the more I came to realize that existing club memberships are shrinking, that more and more long time members are leaving. Leaving for a variety of reasons, mostly financial, but leaving nonethheless.
But, these people are golfers. Golf is a huge part of their life, something they've been doing for 10, 20, 30 and 40 or more years.
When the one fellow mentioned the names of the public access clubs within a half hour to hour, I began to think, that a really terrific public access course would be very attractive to the significant number of golfers who are leaving their clubs, and, there are plenty of clubs in the Northern NJ area.
Then, I thought of Essex County West, a Tillinghast, Raynor, Banks design, where I had played my first 18 hole round in the mid to late 50's. Much of AWT's, SR's and CB's work has been lost, but, what a great opportunity to reclaim it.
And, the timing would seem to coincide with what appears to be a mass membership exodus from nearby private clubs.
ECW sits in a densely populated area, in West Orange, NJ, so it has the demographic to attract and support play.
It's got the pedigree.
It's got interesting topography.
All it needs is a restoration/revision to make it a "destination" club for Northern NJ and beyond.
While it doesn't have the location and the demographic, The Knoll would also seem to be an attractive target for restoration/revision.
Would this be the opportune time to restore/upgrade a golf course in a heavily populated area ?
What would you do to attract play ?