Thanks to everyone for their thoughts here. We’re really excited about Landmand, and can’t wait for the opening in the latter part of the year next year. I hope that a lot of you will have the opportunity to make it out next year! Should you head that way, shoot me a DM. If I’m around, it would be fun to meet up & play a few holes….
Re: a few of the comments on “maximalism”, I thought I’d offer a few thoughts from our end…
-It might be a matter of semantics, but I don’t see Landmand as a “maximalist” project. To me, maximalism implies a gratuitous amount of earth moving simply for the sake of moving dirt. That wasn’t actually our approach at all. We inherited a 550 acre piece of land, which has such severe elevation changes across it that simply laying a golf course down on top of the existing contours was an impossibility. What we attempted to do, and what I think we succeeded in (thanks in large part to an extremely talented crew) was in moving the minimal amount of dirt required to build walkable & compelling holes, but not any more than necessary to achieve this goal. In some cases, that “minimal” amount of dirt was massive quantities of earth. On places like the 12th hole, golf holes were built directly onto the existing grade and very little earth was moved. Each hole or section of the course presented a new set of questions and the proper answer for each depended on the pre-construction nature of that hole, but the overarching goal in each case was to build holes that would “hide the fill” & blend back into grade in a natural & appealing way. Thanks again to the talented crew & the massive landscape, the tie-ins work and the presentation is natural & appealing to the eye.
When Ron Whitten visited the site, he made a comment that really stuck with me & was something I had not previously considered. What he said was that Landmand offers people the opportunity to walk around and interact with a piece of land that you wouldn’t otherwise take a leisurely stroll on…it simply wasn’t a piece of land you’d go walk around on because it was so severe. By virtue of the quantity of earth that was moved, it is walkable and allows one to experience that landscape in a way that was previously impossible.