GOLF COURSE ARCHITECTURE
MAGAZINE

Issue 57 - July 2019

6

Launched to coincide with the return of the Open Championship to Royal Portrush, the July 2019 issue of GCA features the eighth hole of the club’s Dunluce course on the cover, one of the key changes introduced by Mackenzie & Ebert for this year’s final major.

Our main feature article for this issue explores how club can optimise value from renovation work. If clubs don’t have big budgets, what are the smart choices for improving their course? Adam Lawrence asks the question.

The Tee Box section opens with news of Ogilvy Clayton Cocking Mead’s work at the recently-merged Peninsula Kingswood club in Australia. We also hear from John LaFoy about his work at James River Country Club in Virginia, report on Ian Andrews’s restoration work at St George’s Golf and Country Club in Canada, and much more.

We’ve travelled on both sides of the Atlantic for our site reports in this issue. We feature Henrik Stenson’s design debut alongside golf course architect Christian Lundin, a stadium-style layout for Österåker Golfklubb in Sweden.

We also visit the Ocean course at The Breakers resort in Florida, where Rees Jones has maximised the potential of a compact site; and Canterbury Golf Club in England, whose Harry Colt layout has great potential.

Elsewhere in the issue, Thad Layton of Arnold Palmer Design Company outlines his eight essentials for designing a short game area, and Paul Chester of Huxley Golf talks about how artificial turf can reduce water use at golf facilities.

There’s plenty more too – enjoy the issue!

MAGAZINE
HIGHLIGHTS

Design for the next generation

Design for the next generation

Golf is dominated by middle aged and older players. Adam Lawrence investigates the role design can play in attracting the young

Is the golf boom real?

Is the golf boom real?

With golf experiencing participation figures not seen in decades, is this translating into industry growth for golf course architects?

Match makers

Match makers

While match play may no longer be the predominant format for golf, there are some course projects where it drives the design

Too fast for furious?

Too fast for furious?

Can architects convince their clients to keep greens at speeds that allow them to build contoured surfaces, or are we now in a mostly flat era?

Water reduction: Drying out the game

Water reduction: Drying out the game

Golf needs to find new ways to reduce its water usage, and new innovations in turfgrass may help

The Gravel Pit: Dramatic short shots in central Minnesota

The Gravel Pit: Dramatic short shots in central Minnesota

Scott Hoffmann incorporates template concepts for new thirteen-hole par-three course

Old Chatham: For the players

Old Chatham: For the players

Renovation work at Old Chatham was designed to raise the challenge while remaining playable for all

Designing for all abilities: how low should you go?

Designing for all abilities: how low should you go?

Architects aim to lay out courses that are playable for all. But should they be catering for really bad golfers? 

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