Golf Course Architecture - Issue 69, July 2022

30 Construction of a new 18-hole golf course, designed by Stirling & Martin, in Castellon on Spain’s Mediterranean coast, will begin in September. Architects Blake Stirling and Marco Martin were first introduced to the site in 2004. That project, with the working title St Gregory Golf, did not come to fruition, but the architects were contacted about the site again in 2020 by another developer with plans to transform the 300-hectare site into a tourism destination called Los Cálamos. The project includes a golf course plus housing, a football academy, tennis academy, skate park, private park and 20 hectares of land reserved for environmental conservation. Part of the environmental plan is to create a nature reservoir for native turtles and an overf low channel to evacuate rainwater during heavy storms. “As a golf architect, it has been an enthralling task to develop a routing that merges with all the environmental, engineering and land use restrictions,” said Martin. “We are so close to the beach and our site is extremely f lat – there’s less than a one-metre difference in any spot. The water level f luctuates from 0.6 to 1.3 metres, and we are limited with the volume that can be imported. “The owner wanted great views of the opening holes from the houses that will be built, and during the rainy season, we have to take care of – and circulate around the golf course – more than 24 cubic metres of water per second. With the environmental restrictions and archaeological areas that are to be integrated in the design, it makes for a great cocktail Stirling & Martin designs new course on Mediterranean coast TEE BOX “ The final routing is a great example of what a golf course master plan should be when it relates to residential and tourist areas” Images: Stirling & Martin

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