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JNC Lyon

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After our morning 18 at Greate Bay, a neat Willie Park, Jr. course, Mark McKeever, Kris Shreiner, and I made the drive through Atlantic City and out to the barrier island Brigantine.  Brigantine is a quaint little seaside town that also happens to a contain a Wayne Stiles and John Van Kleek golf course.  While others can provide more detailed history on the development of Brigantine, it is clearly one of America's first housing development golf courses, and it is a good one at that.

Per recommendation from Kyle Harris, we played the back nine at Brigantine, as we only a couple hours of sunlight left.  Man, is that cool nine holes of golf or what?!  The course is essentially dead flat, winding around tidal ponds and houses, but the turf is sandy and springy, and the architectural features break up the bland terrain perfectly.  In 9 holes you get two excellent reachable par fours (10 and 18), two dynamite par threes (the 12th, with a partially hidden green, and the 15th, a moat-like raised green that is intimidating a target as you will ever see), and a smattering of excellent par fours.

My favorite hole on the course is the 11th, a sub-350, S-shaped par four.  From the tee, all the player can see is the left edge of the fairway and a gaping bunker that covers the right two-thirds of the playing corridor.  The goal off the tee is to drive as far to the right over the bunker as possible.  Of course, the farther right one aims off the tee, the more uncomfortable one gets, but a drive that finds the right portion of the fairway is rewarded with an excellent angle for the approach shot.  The green, like many at Brigantine, is raised and falls off on all sides, and it slopes devilishly from back to front.  A brilliant short par four I feel like I would never tire of playing.

Brigantine's most important characteristic, I feel, is that it works as a housing development course.  This is true for a few reasons:

1) Wide playing corridors.  While many courses today are wedged in between condos, the original corridors at Brigantine give the golfer plenty of room to play (and keep golf balls farther away from the homeowners).  Also, reeds and scrub on the edges of the houses soften the presence of the homes and give the course a more natural appearance.

2) Engaging architecture.  Many housing courses are just plopped into a development to sell homes, but Brigantine has some real character to it.  The green surrounds in particular pull golfers in, and keep them there.  An interesting golf course will be much more likely to gain long-term customers and residents.

3) Well-attached routing.  While the course weaves in and out of houses, there are no long walks between tees and greens.  In many cases, you can see the next tee from the previous green, something less prevalent in the home development courses I've seen in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina.  A walkable course is one that folks will want to play consistently.  Yes, believe it or not, there are golfers that still like to walk.

Anyone designing on a golf-centered housing development should be required to play Brigantine.  And if you're a Philly guy who hasn't seen it yet, you really should.
« Last Edit: February 20, 2012, 03:45:01 PM by JNC Lyon »
"That's why Oscar can't see that!" - Philip E. "Timmy" Thomas

Mark McKeever

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Re: My Favorite Nine of the Cabin Fever Trip: BRIGANTINE'S BACK NINE
« Reply #1 on: February 20, 2012, 03:09:15 PM »
John,

The green on 11 was something else.  It is relatively flat on th front third of the green then proceeds to slope severely from the back through most of the surface.  However on the back edge, there is a few paces to put a pin that would absolutely give most people fits.  The beauty of it is that you have only a wedge in your hands, you can't hit it with an ouce of spin or it will funnel back to the front of the green.

The executive tour needs to stop here soon.

Mark
Best MGA showers - Bayonne

"Dude, he's a total d***"

Joe Bausch

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Re: My Favorite Nine of the Cabin Fever Trip: BRIGANTINE'S BACK NINE
« Reply #2 on: February 20, 2012, 03:22:52 PM »
Thanks for the detailed report.

I think the Executive Trail Tour should do a Van Kleek/Stiles double with a visit to Brigantine and Wildwood.
@jwbausch (for new photo albums)
The site for the Cobb's Creek project:  https://cobbscreek.org/
Nearly all Delaware Valley golf courses in photo albums: Bausch Collection

Kris Shreiner

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: My Favorite Nine of the Cabin Fever Trip: BRIGANTINE'S BACK NINE
« Reply #3 on: February 20, 2012, 03:41:18 PM »
Well better late than never. John's fine summation, and Mark's "executive" order for a return visit by the Philly and Friends contingent are spot on. I would add that the "maintenance meld" was superb for this type of presentation. The rough, bunkers and transition areas were smartly scruffy, while the tees (temps excepted, where there was ongoing turf replacement), greens and their surrounds were in excellent nick and well cared for. The super and his cronies had it nailed!

While the Winter in New Jersey has been kind thus far and aided in the fine conditions for this time of year, that presentation balance, for a public, daily fee course is as good as I've seen anywhere. It is an "affordable golf"' model to emulate for sure. The modest homes that are situated around it show that the golf doesn't have to be over the top or extortionate to be successful.

The greenhead flies are rather aggressive in the summer months and have been known to carry off unattended small children, but during the shoulder seasons and for Winter golf...game on!

Kudos to Mr. Harris on an excellent assessment. It was a certain bonus to a great day of company and gauwf.


Cheers,
Kris 8)
"I said in a talk at the Dunhill Tournament in St. Andrews a few years back that I thought any of the caddies I'd had that week would probably make a good golf course architect. We all want to ask golfers of all abilities to get more out of their games -caddies do that for a living." T.Doak

Joe Bausch

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Re: My Favorite Nine of the Cabin Fever Trip: BRIGANTINE'S BACK NINE
« Reply #4 on: December 16, 2014, 05:35:18 PM »
So I finally did get down to see Brigantine last Sunday.  It was well worth the visit.  As John and others say above, the back nine has some really fun stuff, especially holes 11-13 which my group now calls "A-Renn Corner" in homage to Garrett Renn, who brought back Brigantine after it was mothballed decades ago.

Lighting wasn't great, but I still think this album is worth a visit:

http://xchem.villanova.edu/~bausch/images/albums/Brigantine/
@jwbausch (for new photo albums)
The site for the Cobb's Creek project:  https://cobbscreek.org/
Nearly all Delaware Valley golf courses in photo albums: Bausch Collection