Check the yardage book: Kasumigaseki East Course for the 2021 Olympic Games

Kasumigaseki Country Club dates back nearly a century, but it was a Fazio renovation in 2016 that prepared the course for the Olympics.

Kasumigaseki Country Club and its East Course, host site for golf in this year’s Olympic Games, was founded in 1929 and renovated a few years later by British designer C.H. Alison before being closed during World War II. The U.S. Air Force took over the property following the war, and the East and a new West Course were re-established in the following years.

The East featured two greens on each hole for decades, with one green covered in a winter grass and the other in a grass that thrived during the warm summers.

All that changed with a 2016 renovation by American architect Tom Fazio and his son, Logan, who converted the private Kasumigaseki’s double greens into single greens. The Fazios also repositioned fairway bunkers to challenge modern professionals, and they reframed several holes in their existing corridors. The greens are now covered in bent grass, with zoysia in play on the rest of the course.

A 2017 aerial photo of Kasumigaseki Country Club in Kawagoe, outside of Tokyo, Japan (Miyuki Saito/Kyodo News via AP)

The course will play 7,447 yards for the men July 29-August 1, and it will play 6,648 yards for the women August 4-7.

Kasumigaseki has been the host of several notable golf events, including several Japan Opens and various top amateur events. It hosted the 1957 Canada Cup, a precursor to the World Cup, and Hideki Matsuyama won the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship on Kasumigaseki’s West Course in 2010. Now the Masters champion, Matsuyama is a favorite in these Olympics.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players will face this week and next. Check out each hole below (yardages will be adjusted for the women), and follow this link to the club’s website to see drone footage of each hole, with narration by Tom Fazio.

This California golf course hosted the 1955 Ryder Cup — and is getting its first renovation in 40 years

Thunderbird Country Club hosted 1955 Ryder Cup, PGA Tour events from 1952-59 and was originally a course for Bob Hope Classic.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — As the oldest 18-hole golf course in the desert, Thunderbird Country Club has a natural affinity to its history. It’s a history that includes hosting the 1955 Ryder Cup, holding a PGA Tour event from 1952 to 1959 and being one of the original courses in the tournament that would become the Bob Hope Classic and now The American Express.

But at 70 years old, and 40 years removed from the last major renovation on the Rancho Mirage course, the members and administration at Thunderbird have begun a $6.5 million renovation project that will extend to the fall of 2022. The renovation is not designed to fundamentally change but improve the historic layout.

“We are not trying to change our footprint,” said Brett Draper, general manager and COO of Thunderbird. “We are just trying to move it into the next phase of its life. Really, the members don’t want to see massive changes. They just want to see improvement, aesthetic improvement.”

The renovation is starting this summer with the first three holes of the golf course as well as practice facilities. Workers are basically scraping all of the Bermuda grass turf off the tees, fairways, rough and greens to allow for shaping work on greens and other areas of the course. The end result will include more modern Bermuda grasses to be sprigged onto the course later this summer.

“We are doing a full 18-hole renovation,” Draper said. “Basically we are going to touch every hole on the golf course. We are going to rebuild five greens, we are going to re-do our bunkers, new designs, new liners, new sand.”

The first three holes and practice areas will be open in November, but before that the course ground crew under superintendent Roger Compton will work to eliminate Bermuda grass on the remaining 15 holes. That means golfers this winter and next spring will play on a cool-weather grass without a traditional Bermuda base. Then, as the cool-weather grass dies off naturally, the old Bermuda grass will not be a concern as the renovation project begins again.

Overseeing the work is architect Tripp Davis from Oklahoma, who shared the same vision of restoration rather than change that the Thunderbird membership had, said head professional Nick Dekock.

“Some outstanding candidates applied to retain the job. But Tripp was one who was really accepted by the membership,” Dekock said. “He also wanted to bring it back to the restoration, to the original historical design and not try to create a golf course. There might have been one or two others who in my opinion wanted to completely transform Thunderbird, and that’s not what any of the membership wanted. They wanted to keep the original design.”

First of the great 1950s desert courses

That original design, by Lawrence Hughes, was naturally a relatively flat course in 1951 when bulldozers still weren’t used much in building golf courses. Through the years, the course has been modernized, but the last true renovation of the course came in 1980 by architect Ted Robinson. Davis proved his work to the club members with some minor restorations to the layout in 2020.

“There is more of a rustic, natural flowing shape to the bunkers,” Dekock said. “He redid the two bunkers by the first green last summer, and it just had a more natural flow. Aesthetically, you can see the bunkers from the fairway, and they just have a more natural look.”

The work this summer and next year is just the beginning of updates to Thunderbird, Draper said. The club is focusing on many of the changes and additions that other desert private country clubs are trying to retain members and attract new members.

“This is kind of rebranding of the club. We call this Thunderbird 75, honoring the history, building the future,” Draper said. “Obviously, it’s golf, and that’s what is at the forefront, but addresses all our non-golf needs. We have a plan in place now to address $15 million in capital improvements in the next eight to 10 years. Golf is the first because it is the most important thing we have.”

Like other clubs, Thunderbird officials say the COVID-19 pandemic has actually been a boon to the amount of play at the course.

“We haven’t seen the number of rounds of golf reach these levels since 2006, so around 15 years since we have the amount of play that we saw this year,” Draper said. “We had a lot of members, I think, it reminded them how important the clubs is to them in their daily lives and how it is an outlet for them to come out and allow our team to serve them.”

But renovating the course and other facilities in the coming years isn’t just about current members, Draper admits.

“The excitement level of our current members is through the roof. They are extremely excited about seeing this,” he said. “We had an 87 percent approval vote for this. What we saw with that excitement level is new member interest has exceeded what our expectations were.”

Augusta National making big changes? Aerial photos appear to show several

Eureka Earth tweets aerial photos of bare fairways, changes to treelines and more at the host site of the Masters.

Augusta National Golf Club has seen plenty of changes over the decades. The bunkers look nothing like they did when the host site of the Masters opened in 1932. Holes have been lengthened, ponds have been added to Nos. 11 and 16 and tees have shifted. The now-famous and ultra-speedy bent grass on the greens wasn’t introduced until 1980. Fairways have been narrowed, and a second cut of grass – almost rough, albeit on the light side – was introduced.

On and on. The chairmen in the green coats have always kept a close eye on making the course – which ranks No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list – play the way they want. And, it appears, they are back at it with heavy machinery on the Alister MacKenzie layout.

Based on tweets by Eureka Earth at @EurekaEarthPlus, which feature detailed aerial photos, several holes at Augusta National have become worksites since Hideki Matsuyama wrapped up his Masters title in April.

The club has not commented on what work is underway. And while it looks as if several holes might feature new tees or fewer trees, it’s also possible the club has other plans. It’s likely that nobody except the members will know for sure until after the work is done.

New American Dunes course supports Folds of Honor with unabashed patriotic flair

Jack Nicklaus designed American Dunes in Michigan, and all profits will benefit Folds of Honor and the families of fallen U.S. soldiers.

Ever had to bend an approach shot around a giant American flag? You might if you’re lucky enough to play the soon-to-open, Jack Nicklaus-designed American Dunes in western Michigan.

“We have the most unapologetic, massive American flag that sits in the middle of the conjoining fairways on nine and 10,” said U.S. Air Force Reserves Lieutenant Colonel Dan Rooney, who still flies F-16 fighter planes and who is the driving force behind American Dunes. “And there’s a local rule: It’s an unmovable obstruction. If you’re behind it, what a great story to tell.”

There will be many similar stories at the new course. Built to drive its profits to the Folds of Honor, a non-profit organization that provides academic scholarships to the children of wounded or killed soldiers, American Dunes promises to loudly and proudly salute those who have sacrificed while in military service.

American Dunes
American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan (Courtesy of American Dunes)

American Dunes opens May 2, and all profits from the course will be donated to Folds of Honor, which Rooney created in 2007 after sitting on a tarmac at the end of a commercial flight that also brought home the remains of a fallen soldier. The pilots of the flight asked that passengers remain seated while the casket containing the soldier was unloaded from the plane, but many passengers stood and began deboarding. Rooney wanted to find a better way to honor the sacrifice of that soldier and all those like him.

Folds of Honor was born, and in 2019 it awarded approximately $22 million in educational scholarships to more than 4,500 students, representing a 10 percent increase in scholarships from 2018.

Nicklaus at American Dunes
Jack Nicklaus designed the renovated layout at American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan. (Courtesy of American Dunes)

American Dunes in an extension of that mission, Rooney said, and the patriotic theme will be everywhere. Players must walk through what Rooney called a massive Folds of Honor memorial on the way into the clubhouse. The boot imprints of fallen soldiers will line the walkway through 8-foot walls, on which hang the stories of those soldiers and their families as well as the origin story of Folds. A bell will toll 13 times at 1 p.m. each day to signify the 13 folds in the American flag when it is handed to a fallen soldier’s family, and the National Anthem will play daily.

“I’m telling you, people will walk into the golf shop with tears in their eyes. You will know immediately why this place is here,” Rooney said of the entrance. “If you were talking to a normal person about any other golf course, they would want to tell you all about the course. But the golf is just one character, certainly a main character but just one character in this story of American Dunes. It’s really not the only thing that sets it apart, because there’s a lot of great golf in the world.

“Nobody will be disappointed when they come play this course. … But what they’re going to tell their friends about is not simply the golf story. It’s the experience we created at American Dunes that is unlike anything else in the world. I always go back to the term reverent, and it’s so reverent.”

American Dunes
American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan (Courtesy of American Dunes)

The course sits on the site of the former Grand Haven Golf Club, which was built in 1965 and which Rooney’s family owned for 20 years. Rooney partnered with four other investors to establish American Dunes LLC in renovating the layout, and little looks the same after Nicklaus agreed to wave what Rooney said was his typical $3-million design fee and totally rethought what was a heavily wooded course just a few hundred yards from the shore of Lake Michigan.

Rooney called the new layout much more “natural and organic,” with long views across the rolling property’s nearly 100 feet of elevation changes in what is now a much bouncier, sandier environment.

“The site was there, but it was totally treed,” Rooney said. “And it was on sand, but there was not a bit of sand you could see anywhere. That was the brilliance of Jack coming in and saying we’re going to take out every piece of turf, take out every piece of topsoil, take down 100 acres of trees, and we’re going to turn this thing into American Dunes. In Jack fashion, man, it’s hard. The slope from the back is like 151. So it’s all the golf you would ever want. …

American Dunes
American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan (Courtesy of American Dunes)

“When Jack came up to see the site, they drove around the golf course on a beautiful afternoon in May, and when we finished he said, ‘Dan, you have no idea what you have here.’ Then we started the process, and it went from ‘Hey, I’m going to do a nice little redesign,’ to a complete reimagination. What drove that line of effort was that this golf course has the potential, and it has to be as good and as reverent as the cause. They literally stripped this dune environment.”

Rooney said Nicklaus made nine trips to the site, and Nicklaus’ wife, Barbara, told Rooney that the plans for the course were frequently found on the kitchen table as Jack plotted the design.

American Dunes
American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan (Courtesy of American Dunes)

“I’ve never seen Jack do anything like this course,” said Rooney, who besides being a fighter pilot is also a PGA of America golf professional. “You could put tee markers anywhere and play it at any length. It’s kind of informal, if you know what I mean. It’s just so natural.”

The patriotic and military themes extends beyond the golf course and the memorial at the entrance to the clubhouse. The restaurant is set up like a fighter jocks’ squadron bar, with the beer taps built into a hollowed-out Aim-9 Sidewinder missile that normally would be hung under the wing of an F-16. Rooney called it the “ultimate Budweiser bar,” as the brand will be favored after Budweiser has donated more than $18 million to Folds of Honor over the past decade.

“The hang, if you want to call it that, at this place is just over the top. It’s just fun,” Rooney said, adding that the experience can go even further when a lodge named The Camp opens in 2022 with 16 rooms.

American Dunes
American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan (Courtesy of American Dunes)

Many companies have donated course equipment or provided deep discounts to support Rooney’s mission, and others have donated to support construction. Rooney is a natural pitchman and fundraiser, and it’s easy to be swept up in his enthusiasm for the project, whether you be a golfer, a military supporter or both. With profits going to Folds, Rooney said it’s all worth it.

“This is a golf course where the objective, the unwavering objective, is to raise money and awareness for the Folds of Honor Foundation and support these families,” Rooney said. “That’s what truly sets this place apart.”

The Refuge Golf Course in Mississippi to reopen after extensive renovation

The public-access layout has new grass on the greens and tees, rebuilt bunkers, wider corridors and three new holes as part of renovation.

The Refuge Golf Course in Flowood, Mississippi, reopens April 19 after an extensive, multiyear renovation to the public-access layout.

The work included removing trees, enlarging playing corridors, re-grassing the greens and several tee boxes, even moving several water hazards. Irrigation and drainage systems were enhanced, cart paths were improved and the bunkers were rebuilt using the Billy Bunker Method, which introduces capillary concrete liners that provide for better drainage and extend the life of the sand traps. Three new holes were introduced.

The Refuge was designed by Roy Case in 1998, and a renovation began in 2017 under Nathan Crace. Management company Troon was hired in 2020, and its Honours Golf division oversaw the final stages of the renovation.

The course near Jackson, Mississippi, can play from 4,439 yards to 7,013, giving plenty of options for players of any skill level. Posted rates top out at $65 for weekends.

“After years of hard work, we look forward to showcasing the new playing experience at The Refuge to our residents and daily-fee guests,” Flowood Mayor Gary Rhoads said in a media release announcing the reopening. “We brought on Troon, the top-rated golf management company in the industry, to help us navigate through this golf course development project, and they have surpassed our expectations. The newly renovated golf course and beautiful new hotel and conference center are just the beginning of many wonderful things to come to the City of Flowood.”

Other features of the renovation include a new water practice range, a new golf shop and locker rooms, and a new restaurant slated to open soon.

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Architect Andy Staples renovates San Vicente Golf Resort near San Diego

The work focused on better greens with new grass, improved bunkers and new tees that introduce better strategy for the course in Ramona.

Architect Andy Staples has completed a renovation of the course at San Vicente Golf Resort in Ramona, California, with preview play open now for members and residents while the general public and resort guests can book tee times starting March 1.

Staples and his eponymous design firm renovated all the greens, sand bunkers and tees to increase strategy while providing what he called a unique style and aesthetic to the San Diego golf market.

“This was an incredible opportunity to work with a great owner and a very unique property,” Staples said in a media release announcing the completion of the project. “Our vision from the beginning was to take this course to another level in terms of design aesthetic, playability and, of course, fun. I think San Vicente’s members and guests are going to be blown away with the improvements.”

San Vicente Golf Resort in Ramona, California, after a renovation by Andy Staples in 2021 (Photos courtesy of Michael Gainey, PGA)

Staples said the primary goal was to upgrade the infrastructure of the greens and bunkers while increasing their maintenance efficiency. The new greens feature Pure Distinction bent grass, while the turf surrounds were sprigged with Santa Ana Bermuda grass. The sand bunkers now feature Capillary Concrete liners to improve conditioning and drainage. Staples said other objectives included greater diversity of teeing yardages, tree management and overall drainage improvements.

Long-time San Vicente course superintendent Pat Shannon helped complete the project before his retirement. Australian Ben McBride will take over in that role and is in charge of opening preparations for the course, which originally was designed by Ted Robinson in 1972.

San Vicente Golf Resort in Ramona, California, after a renovation by Andy Staples in 2021 (Photos courtesy of Michael Gainey, PGA)

“I love what Andy has done in terms of how the new green complexes blend seamlessly into their surroundings,” McBride said in the media release. “It’s very similar to courses in my native Australia where short grass not only plays an integral role in how the course is presented for daily play, but how important it is for the design to match the maintenance regimen. I can tell you this will be a pretty unique look for this area.”

Staples said his other current projects include numerous master planning projects such as Olympia Fields Country Club in suburban Chicago, Mount Bruno Country Club in Montreal and the reimagined Squire Course at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

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Tripp Davis starts work on renovation of BraeBurn CC in Houston

Work on the 90-year-old course includes new greens, turf and irrigation, making for better year-round conditions.

Tripp Davis and Associates has started an extensive renovation project at BraeBurn Country Club in Houston.

The private BraeBurn originally was designed by John Bredemus in 1931 and was extensively renovated in 1991 by Carlton Gipson, with significant elevation changes added.

“I have always wanted to be a part of a great project in Houston – a very golf-rich area,” Davis said in a media release announcing the project. “I am excited to finally be on the ground getting work going, and I can’t wait to get the membership back on the new course this fall.”

The work at BraeBurn will include rebuilding and reshaping all the greens, rebuilding and shifting tees, rebuilding and shifting bunkers in a more classic style and making better use of the elevation. New Northbridge Bermuda grass will be installed along with a new irrigation system and upgraded drainage. The practice facility also will be renovated.

Davis’ past restoration and renovations projects include Deepdale Club and Engineers Country Club in New York, Jimmie Austin OU Golf Club and Oak Tree National in Oklahoma, Sunnehanna Country Club in Pennsylvania, and Preston Trail Golf Club in Texas, among dozens of others. He also has built more than a dozen original courses, most of them in Texas and Oklahoma, including Old American Golf Club.

“This golf course redesign and construction project is a fantastic way for BraeBurn and its members to celebrate our 90th anniversary,” BraeBurn general manager Dan Olson said in the media release. “Tripp has created a timeless design built on a vision that will sustain interest, character and challenging yet friendly golf for all levels of play.”

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Olympia Fields approves South Course restoration by Andy Staples

The work, scheduled to begin in the fall of 2021, is intended to improve the ground game on 18 the famed Chicago-area golf club’s 36 holes.

The members at Olympia Fields Country Club near Chicago have voted to undertake a comprehensive restoration and upgrade of their South Course.

The South Course comprises half the holes at Olympia Fields. The other 18-hole layout at the club is the North, which has hosted many elite competitions including two U.S. Opens (1928, 2003) and two PGA Championships (1925, 1961). The PGA Tour’s BMW Championship was held on the North in 2020, with Jon Rahm taking the playoff title.

The South Course is ranked No. 159 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for layouts built before 1960 in the United States. The North Course is No. 55 on that list. The South is also ranked No. 10 on Golfweek’s Best Private Courses list for Illinois, with the North No. 4 on that state-by-state list.

Course architect Andy Staples will oversee the project on the South, which includes drainage improvement, bunker renovation, fairway expansion, tree work, naturalized native rough and more short grass around the greens. Teeing grounds also will be configured in the project, which has a budgeted cost of $4 million.

Olympia Field’s South Course near Chicago (Courtesy of Olympia Fields Golf Club)

The work – which should showcase the ground game with firmer conditions than available now – will be completed in two phases, starting in the fall of 2021 and continuing again in the fall of 2022. Staples is basing his restoration efforts on his study of photos and design plans in the club’s archives as well as his study of classical design elsewhere. Staples’ previous restoration work includes Meadowbrook Country Club in Detroit, and he is now at work on Mount Bruno Golf Club in Montreal and Delray Beach Golf Course in Florida.

The South dates to a 1916 route designed by Tom Bendelow that was revised by Willie Park Jr.

Olympia Fields in the 1920s had four 18-hole courses, but some land was sold off in the 1940s. Sixteen holes of the original No. 1 course and two holes of the No. 2 course were combined to complete 18 as what became the South.

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The golden age of golf course renovation and restoration

Golf designers Gil Hanse and Bill Coore feel the pressure and pride of tackling restorations of classic courses that host U.S. Opens.

There’s a segment of art fans who regularly demand the Mona Lisa be cleaned and restored. It’s a touchy debate. If the painting were to be restored, it might better represent what Leonardo da Vinci intended as he created it. But if so much as a line of her smile was damaged during such attempts, a real possibility when dealing with a 500-year-old painting … well, art fans don’t like to consider the loss of even a single stroke of paint on that famous face. 

There are similar debates throughout the art world as experts consider what was, what is and what will be for masterpieces of all kinds. Paintings. Classic architecture. Sculpture. The list goes on and on. 

Even golf courses. 

The early 20th century has been dubbed by many to be the golden age of course design in the United States, as 94 of the top 100 layouts on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list were built in the four decades through the 1930s as cars proliferated and airplanes took off. The 1990s and early 2000s also were boom times, but nothing compared to that previous stretch in which famed designers – artists, really – produced so many masterpieces. 

And just like famous paintings, these courses sometimes show their age. Throw in the effects of benign neglect or, even worse, well-intended alterations that abandon key characteristics, and many of the best golf courses have slowly lost much of their original designers’ intentions, even without considering the greater distances that modern golf balls travel.

Greens shrink and their internal contours are often subdued. Bunkers migrate, changing shapes, depths and sizes. Fairway widths are altered. Trees grow to block ideal lines of play. Golf courses are living, breathing creations that are subject to ever-changing budgets, growth patterns and whims of membership committees – nothing remains static. 

As with any work that might be done to the Mona Lisa, there are many considerations when tackling the problems of aging golf courses. But Mona Lisa doesn’t live outside in a field, subject to weather and all kinds of dynamic forces. Golf courses do, and they need work to retain their artistry.

Enter the modern golf architect, many of whom have become restoration artists. For most of today’s designers, much of their business since the financial crash of the late 2000s and subsequent drop in new golf course development is less about creating their own namesake layouts as it is restoring, renovating and otherwise touching up existing layouts. 

In fact, it’s safe to say that in the past decade we have entered a golden era of restoration and renovation. The top courses on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list is full of prime examples, many of which are on full, televised display during major championships. Even the list of top resort courses in the U.S. – which tends to favor more modern layouts – is dotted with significant renovations and restorations. 

“There’s been an appreciation building over time going back several decades, and I think what’s been happening is, because of this golden age of restoration, not only is there an appreciation for the name architects – A.W. Tillinghast, Donald Ross, Alister MacKenzie, C.B. Macdonald and several others – there’s a greater appreciation for their talents and their golf courses,” said Gil Hanse, whose portfolio of restorations with design partner Jim Wagner continues to grow. “There’s maybe more of an appreciation for those architects now. You can see that across the board for other modern architects and the courses they have touched, too.”

Winged Foot Golf Club West Course
The ninth hole at Winged Foot Golf Club’s West Course in New York, which was restored by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner before the 2020 U.S. Open (Copyright USGA/Russell Kirk)

Hanse’s restorations and renovations include but certainly are not limited to Merion’s East, most recently host of the 2013 U.S. Open; Winged Foot’s West, most recently host of the 2020 U.S. Open; The Country Club, next hosting the 2022 U.S. Open, and Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course (in collaboration with author and blogger Geoff Shackelford), next hosting the 2023 U.S. Open. 

 “It’s a long-winded kind of answer,” Hanse continued, “and there’s been this kind of appreciation for a long time, but now because of all this good restoration work that is happening – of which we are happy to do our part – there’s an even bigger appreciation of the older golf courses and those architects. ‘Wow, we knew these guys were good, but we didn’t know they were this good.’ ”

Bill Coore – who with design partner Ben Crenshaw has worked on classics such as Pinehurst No. 2, Maidstone, Seminole, Riviera and many others – agrees.

“We do seem to be in an era where there are significant efforts going on to try to restore or, in some cases I guess you could say, address the current playing conditions of some of the classic old courses,” Coore said. “They are all living, breathing things like we are, and they change and evolve.

“In the case of the best courses in the country, they have for the most part evolved in a very positive fashion. But they do change. Sometimes the changes are so incremental that they’re almost unnoticeable until years and years later. Then, you realize they were slightly better the way they were intended. You see a lot of that going on, I think. We’re trying to recapture the original intent and playing characteristics of some of these old courses.”

Seminole Golf Club in South Florida was restored by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw. (David Cannon/Getty Images)

 

It can be a daunting task. How exactly does one go about touching up a masterpiece without damaging it? The first step typically involves some definition of intent. 

“Part of the process you go through is, what are the goals?” Coore said. “What are you trying to obtain if you’re working at one of those great old courses? Is it purely trying to recapture the character and the aesthetics? Is it trying to recapture the playing characteristics? Is it trying to address issues pertaining to more modern golf? Is it all of the above?”

The terms thrown about can muddle things. What exactly is a restoration? And what is a renovation? Do those terms ever cross, and how many shades of gray are present between them? 

“The easiest way for us to describe it, for Jim Wagner and myself, is that a restoration is when the original architect’s thoughts, style and design are the driving force behind every decision on the site,” Hanse said. “A renovation is when we’re interjecting our original design thoughts into an existing golf course, allowing our prejudices, thoughts, skills, etcetera, to influence what we think would make for a better golf course.”

Hanse pointed to his and Wagner’s work at Winged Foot’s West course in New York as a restoration, with the duo trying to reclaim the characteristics instilled by the original designer, Tillinghast. Greens edges had crept in since the course opened in 1923, leaving fewer hole locations. Some bunkers had become irrelevant. Among all the work involved, perhaps key was Hanse and Wagner’s expansion of putting surfaces back to their original sizes and shifting of bunkers to better fit Tillinghast’s intent of challenging players. 

The second hole at Pinehurst No. 4, which was renovated by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner (Courtesy of Pinehurst Resort)

At the opposite end of Hanse’s redesign-renovation spectrum is Pinehurst No. 4, a Ross layout at the famed North Carolina resort that had been the subject of numerous subsequent redesigns since its opening as a full 18 in 1919. Defining it as a renovation and not a restoration from the start, Hanse and Wagner built what Hanse called “close to being a whole new golf course” through mostly existing corridors in the pines, and that renovation opened to play in 2018. 

Pinehurst is a great example of the different ways to approach a renovation or restoration, as it has been 10 years since Coore and Crenshaw wrapped up what most certainly was a restoration of Pinehurst No. 2, the resort’s flagship course that rests directly next to Hanse’s since-renovated No. 4. 

Often cited as among the best of Ross’s designs, No. 2 had changed considerably over the decades following its 1903 opening. The course’s most famous features are its crowned greens, but much of the rest of the course might have been almost unrecognizable to Ross, who lived for years to the side of the third green. Most dramatically, the native sandy areas alongside fairways had been replaced with grass at rough heights, presenting totally different appearances and playing challenges. 

No. 2 hosted U.S. Opens in 1999 and 2005, and even between those Opens the course changed, with fairways growing more narrow between ever-expanding fields of rough. After that 2005 Open, the resort’s operators wanted to make drastic changes. Employing Coore and Crenshaw in 2010, they opted to take the course back in time, restoring what once was to replace what it had become. 

“Sometimes we look back at some of the architecture that has happened at Pinehurst, whether it’s golf course architecture or building architecture, and you scratch your head a little bit,” Tom Pashley, now the president of Pinehurst Resort, said at Golfweek’s Architecture Summit in November of 2020. “How did this happen, how did that happen? …

“The decision was made, and it was a risk but it was obviously the right decision, to take No. 2 back. It had become a very manicured golf course, and the standing wire grass areas were only ornamental. It didn’t look like a Sandhills course. … Things had happened over the years, and the courses had evolved and all that, and we just said, look, this land is where Ross laid out the original four courses in Pinehurst, and we need to be true to some sort of aesthetic, the Ross aesthetic.”

So Coore and Crenshaw were tasked with taking the course back, but to what, exactly? And for whom, Tour pros in the U.S. Open or resort guests? And how to do that? 

“At least for us, the single biggest priority is to take ourselves out of it,” Coore said. “If we leave signatures that we’ve been there, we failed, quite frankly. The goal is to recapture – at least at places like Pinehurst or Maidstone or wherever – the goal is to try to recapture what made that place so special in the beginning. And all those cases, they were built long before Ben and I were ever on this earth. So we take ourselves out of it, yet we’re so involved in it, trying to study the original intent. What did Donald Ross intend at Pinehurst No. 2? What was the focus? How did the course play and look?”

Coore and Crenshaw got a major boost when local resident Craig Disher presented them with aerial photos of Pinehurst No. 2 taken on Christmas Day in 1943. The design duo received another break when Pinehurst agronomist Bob Farren told them the current irrigation system had been laid in the same trenches as the water pipes installed during Ross’s time, allowing them to figure out the previous center lines of the fairways while projecting their width based on how far water would have been sprinkled. 

“I said, ‘Bob, if that’s the case, we have not only a road map, we have the center of the road,’ ” Coore said of the old irrigation system. 

Such sleuthing can be crucial to a true restoration. At Pinehurst, those kinds of efforts allowed Coore and Crenshaw, with a fairly high degree of certainty, to present the course as it looked in 1943, with wider fairways surrounded by native grasses and no traditional rough. 

The ninth green at Pinehurst No. 2, as seen before Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw’s restoration (inset photo) and after, with new wire grass (Photos courtesy of Pinehurst and by David Cannon/Getty Images)

The U.S. Open returned to No. 2 in 2014, with Martin Kaymer winning on a firmer, faster and browner layout that looked almost nothing as it had in 1999 and 2005. It was a departure from the typical U.S. Open setup of tall rough, but the work was roundly praised. And with the U.S. Golf Association now slated to establish a second headquarters at Pinehurst, the U.S. Open will return with No. 2 as an anchor site in 2024, 2029, 2035, 2041 and 2047.

“We’re very proud of Pinehurst, because the people there are very proud of it,” Coore said. “I know there were people who said, what on earth are they doing, they’re going to destroy the place. But I think given the time since the work – and it’s probably been enough time to begin to assess – that this was a positive move. 

“I grew up in North Carolina and I played golf at Pinehurst as a kid, and I remembered it from what it was in the 1960s, and I just knew from my own memory that it had changed dramatically through the years. Ben and I certainly never would have gone there and said you need to change this, you need to restore this. All that influence came from the Pinehurst people, who said we’ve been listening and studying that this course is not the way it used to be. It was a huge leap of faith.”

While Pinehurst serves as a great model for restorations and renovations, it’s hardly alone in efforts to refine a golf course, even among U.S. Open venues. Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania, host to nine Opens, for example famously removed thousands of trees in the 1990s and 2000s to restore playing corridors as intended by original designer Henry Fownes. That certainly would be one of the most visually impactful restorations for any television viewer. 

None of this is exactly new. Robert Trent Jones Sr. was known for his work on championship courses, and his son Rees followed in his footsteps. Courses have been the targets of redesign efforts ever since the game developed. Old Tom Morris certainly was known to tinker.

But as courses continue to age, efforts have been stepped up at many private clubs and resorts alike, often with grander goals of revisiting previous work that was more limited in scope. Whereas announcements of course openings filled the news wires in the early 2000s, today’s design news is more typically filled with restorations and renovations – not a week goes by without announcements of such work across the U.S. 

It’s all a great opportunity for current architects, but it can be very different than creating a new course. In a sense, great restorations are more of a research endeavor than a design process. 

“When you’re in the field, there’s a ton of archaeology,” Hanse said. “You’ll find old bunkers and things. We’re working at Oakland Hills right now, and we’ll be sifting through, and ‘That looks like old bunker sand. Yep, there’s a layer, chase it and find where it goes.’ So there are markers on the ground. Working at Baltusrol, we’ve been sort of peeling away layers of bunker sand buildup along the edges of greens. You have thatch and sort of top dressing, then all the sudden you hit this sort of blackish soil layer. You can chase that soil layer, and that sort of reestablishes where the edge of the bunker was. If you’re paying attention, you can find these things.”

Hanse said the greatest example may have come at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, a George C. Thomas Jr. original design from 1921 that had been reshaped and diminished through the decades. A skilled contractor on an excavator kept finding all kinds of clues to the original course beneath the sod, especially as to the placement of the second and sixth greens. 

“He found the old green surfaces that literally had been covered by dirt – they hadn’t even stripped the grass off it,” Hanse said. “Pulling this away, we even found old cup holes. It was remarkable. We were just able to pull away the dirt and have the old green edges and contours intact. That was one of the coolest things I have ever seen.”

But the fact there are clues in the dirt doesn’t necessarily make it any easier for the architects. 

“Without question, I think Ben and I would both say that there’s more stress in (restoring a classic course than in building a new one),” said Coore, who along with Crenshaw delivered one of the most-anticipated new courses of 2020, the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon. “It’s because you’re not dealing with your product. You’re trying to return the greatest potential of somebody else’s product, a product that has proved to be successful and sometimes even revered around the world for years. 

“So it’s way more stressful and intense than creating a new product where, even though the site might have great potential and expectations, the course doesn’t exist yet. On a new course you’re living up to what the potential of the site is, but you’re not living up to what was. You’re not chasing a ghost.”

– This story originally ran in Golfweek’s 2021 Ultimate Guide.

San Diego to spend $15 million on renovations to municipal courses including Torrey Pines

The city council has allotted $15 million for renovations to the city’s three municipally operated facilities including Torrey Pines.

San Diego’s city council has allotted $15 million for upgrades and renovations to the city’s three municipally operated golf facilities including Torrey Pines’ South Course, site of the 2021 U.S. Open, according to a report Tuesday by the San Diego Union-Tribune.

The South Course at Torrey Pines also hosted the 2008 U.S. Open, in which Tiger Woods outlasted Rocco Mediate in a 19-hole playoff after Woods made a dramatic birdie putt on the 72nd hole to tie and force the extra day.

Torrey Pines’ South and North courses combine as hosts for the annual Farmers Insurance Open on the PGA Tour, won in January by Marc Leishman. The South ranks No. 5 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list of public-access courses in California, while the North ranks No. 11 on that list.

The $15 million approved Monday by the city council also will include contract work at San Diego’s other municipally operated golf facilities at Balboa Park and Mission Bay, the Union-Tribune reported. The courses will remain open during the jobs that include installing new irrigation systems and drainage, replacing and repairing cart paths, renovating bunkers and tree work.

The city agreed to a joint contract with four companies to do the work, with individual projects expected to cost from $250,000 to $2.5 million.

The Union-Tribune reported that Torrey Pines pulls in about $6 million in profit in a typical year, while Balboa and Mission Bay combine to cost the city about $2 million a year. Recent increases in the cost of water and labor have increased losses at Balboa and Mission Bay while reducing profits at Torrey Pines.

Those figures don’t include lease payments for the three courses. The city gets about $1.6 million in lease revenue from Torrey Pines and about $800,000 from Mission Bay and Balboa Park. The city also owns seven other courses it doesn’t operate but that do provide lease revenue.

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