This Midwestern city is looking for $7 million to renovate a Tillinghast classic that once hosted a PGA Tour event

If everything goes through as planned, the course will be closed for over a year and then will reopen in the spring of 2026.

While A.W. Tillinghast is most famous for courses like Winged Foot and Baltusrol, the legendary designer also carved out a number of municipal courses that have had a tremendous impact on the golf world.

Among those is Swope Memorial, a course in the Kansas City chain that opened in 1919 and was touched up by Tillinghast again in 1934.

The course has a ton of history and even hosted the Kansas City Open, a PGA Tour stop, in 1949. It’s one of the best tracks in Missouri that you can play, according to Golfweek’s Best, ranking only behind the three Big Cedar Lodge courses and another in the Branson area.

But the course sees considerable play and is showing its age. According to a story in the Kansas City Star, the course is cracking and city administrators know this to be the case.

“The bunkers have seen better days, the irrigation system is antiquated,” said Douglas Schroeder, director of golf services for Kansas City Parks & Recreation. “The cart paths are made of asphalt, and most don’t allow for proper drainage. The greens are being invaded by poa annua, which is a bluegrass that can’t survive in the heat.”

“One thing led to another,” Schroeder continued, “and finally it was like, It’s time. This is a prized asset of the parks department, and we need to spend some money to get it back to the gold standard it should be.”

That’s why the city’s parks department will take a proposal to the city council seeking $7 million to renovate the classic course and give it a new spin. If everything goes through as planned, the course will be closed for more than a year and will reopen in the spring of 2026. The city has hired CE Golf Design, which is based in Kansas City and led by Todd Clark, to oversee the project.

“I really think it’s something that will benefit the city greatly,” Schroeder told the Star. “For local golfers, but also for tourism. This will be a course people will want to visit.”

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play: Missouri

Big Cedar Lodge has the top two public-access courses in Missouri: Ozarks National and Buffalo Ridge. Payne’s Valley could join them soon.

Missouri presents one of the best opportunities in the United States to play one state’s top two public-access golf courses within an easy 30-minute drive of each other.

It’s easy: Just head to Branson, not far north of the Arkansas state line. Big Cedar Lodge has the top two courses – Ozarks National and Buffalo Ridge – on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for 2020 in the state, and No. 3 is less than half an hour away at Branson Hills Golf Club.

Golfweek ranks courses by compiling the average ratings – on a points basis of 1 to 10 – of its more than 750 raters to create several industry-leading lists of courses. That includes the popular Best Courses You Can Play list for courses that allow non-member tee times. These generally are defined as courses accessible to resort guests or regular daily-fee players.

No. 1 in Missouri is Ozarks National, built by the design duo of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw and opened in 2019. The course takes advantage of the mountainous terrain with holes playing atop and along several ridges. With long views from atop the hills and no adjacent development, it’s one of the most scenic mountain courses anyone could hope to play. It also ranks No. 33 on Golfweek’s Best 2021 list of top resort courses in the U.S.

Buffalo Ridge at Big Cedar Lodge in Missouri (Courtesy of Big Cedar Lodge)

Minutes away is No. 2 Buffalo Ridge, which Tom Fazio redesigned in 2015 and that plays tighter than Ozarks National through the mountainous terrain. It ranks No. 63 among top resort courses in the U.S.

Also at Big Cedar Lodge and just across the parking lot from Ozarks National is the new Tiger Woods-designed Payne’s Valley, which is sure to appear at some point on the Best Courses You Can Play list in Missouri but which hasn’t received the minimum number of ratings to be included in the Golfweek’s Best rankings. The island-green, bonus 19th hole at Payne’s Valley, which sits beneath giant rock walls, has become a social media darling since the layout opened in 2020.

Swope Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri (Courtesy of Swope Memorial)

No. 3 in the state is Branson Hills, another mountain layout that was designed by Chuck Smith with consultation by former PGA Tour player Bobby Clampett. Swope Memorial in Kansas City is No. 4 in the state, and Old Kinderhook in Camdenton is No. 5.

Old Kinderhook in Missouri (Courtesy of Old Kinderhook)

 

 

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Missouri

1. *Big Cedar Lodge (Ozarks National)

Hollister (m) 

2. Big Cedar Lodge (Buffalo Ridge)

Hollister (m) 

3. Branson Hills

Branson (m)

4. Swope Memorial

Kansas City (c)

5. Old Kinderhook

Camdenton (m)

6. Creekmoor

Raymore (m)

7. Ledgestone

Branson (m)

8. Stone Canyon

Blue Springs (m)

9. Missouri Bluffs

St. Charles (m)

10. Shoal Creek

Kansas City (m)

Golfweek’s Best Private Courses in Missouri

1. St. Louis CC

St. Louis (No. 49 c)

2. Bellerive

Creve Couer (m)

3. Dalhousie Golf Club

Cape Girardeau (m)

4. Old Warson

Ladue (c)

5. *Persimmon Woods

Weldon Spring (m)

*New to the list in 2020

(m): modern; (c): classic

How we rate them

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Then each course is ranked against other courses in its state, or nationally, to produce the final rankings.