LATEST
NEWS

Toby Ingleton
/ Categories: News

Restoration work continues at Town & Country Club

Town & Country Club in Saint Paul, USA, is continuing to make progress on a long-term restoration project, following a master plan created by golf course architect Jeff Mingay.

The club played host to the first ever round of golf in Minnesota in 1893, and the course occupies the same location today. Mingay said: “It’s a very unique, beautiful property on the bluffs adjacent to the Mississippi River, featuring stunning views of downtown Minneapolis.”

The project, which has been in progress for three years and Mingay expects to last at least three more, aims to enhance the distinctiveness of a club which has many interesting features, such as back-to-back par threes at the second and third holes, and a closing four-hole stretch that comprises three par fives followed by a par three eighteenth hole.

Work includes improving teeing areas by adding length where available and forward tees; adjusting fairway mowing patterns, simplifying lines and adding width; removing trees; and restoring the original sizes and shapes of green surfaces. “This has reintroduced some interesting pin positions and, in turn, presents more variety day-to-day throughout the golf course,” said Mingay.

“Obviously, the golf course and features of the property have evolved significantly over the past 125 years,” said Mingay. “Most important in this process, we’re ensuring that the golf course continues to function properly and can be maintained agronomically up to contemporary expectations, and at the same time using this opportunity to also restore an architectural character that’s consistent with the club’s unique history and design pedigree.”

Tree removal has been met with some opposition. “Town & Country Club was originally routed through an indigenous oak savannah,” said Mingay. “In its early days, the course featured beautiful stands of native oak and other indigenous specimens complemented by open space that presented awesome views across a beautiful, rolling property. Superintendent Bill Larson, who’s been at T&C for over two decades, has been restoring this character by removing declining, damaged and diseased trees, along with non-indigenous plants, over the past few years, to great effect. Many long-time members are simply used to T&C being a heavily treed golf course. But, T&C was only heavily treed over the past four or five decades, or so. Remember, the course is 125 years old. For most of its history it was comparatively open, featuring native species.”

The tree removal has also benefitted turf health, said Mingay, by increasing the course’s exposure to sunlight and wind, and eliminating root competition.

Mingay is keen to restore some of the uniqueness that has been masked over the years. For example, he is restoring a green from the original 1893 six-hole course. “This green was existing – it’s all there – among a grove of trees that’s been removed. It’s about 140 yards off the back tee at the current par-five sixth hole. The idea is to present a fun option to play to this green as a nineteenth, or betting hole, from those tees at the sixth. You can drive at the par five sixth, then play ‘Little Six’, as some members are calling it, before continuing with your round.”

All work is being handled by Mingay, Larson and his golf course maintenance team.

Previous Article Royal Golf Club opens on site of 3M’s former Tartan Park course
Next Article Coul Links preparing for planning hearing set for 5 June
Print
5985 Rate this article:
No rating
Slideshow HTML
  • Town & Country Club

    A long term restoration project is in progress at Town & Country Club in Saint Paul

  • Town & Country Club

    The work includes restoring the original size and shape of greens

  • Town & Country Club

    The routing includes back to back par threes and three consecutive par fives

  • Town & Country Club

    Architect Jeff Mingay is seeking to enhance the course’s distinctive characteristics

  • Town & Country Club

    The club is restoring one of its original 1893 greens to play as a nineteenth

Toby Ingleton

Toby IngletonToby Ingleton

Other posts by Toby Ingleton
Contact author

Contact author

x
The April 2025 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!
Magazine, News | Wed 16 Apr, 2025

The April 2025 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!

Includes reports from Maggie Hathaway and Apogee, interviews with Martin Ebert and Dave Axland and a feature on golf art

Spring 2025 issue of ASGCA’s By Design magazine is out now
Magazine, News | Fri 14 Mar, 2025

Spring 2025 issue of ASGCA’s By Design magazine is out now

New issue asks whether the golf boom has led to an increase in municipal golf investment

FEATURE
ARTICLES

Oakmont: An interview with Gil Hanse
USGA/Fred Vuich
Interview | Richard Humphreys

Oakmont: An interview with Gil Hanse

With the 2025 US Open arriving at Oakmont, Richard Humphreys spoke with the architect, who renovated the course in 2023, about what to expect

Martin Ebert: Design journey
Taku Miyamoto
Interview | Adam Lawrence

Martin Ebert: Design journey

With a portfolio that includes eight of the ten Open venues, Mackenzie & Ebert occupies an enviable position in the golf design industry. Adam Lawrence spoke with principal Martin Ebert to learn how they got there

South course at Apogee Club: New scenery for second act
Toby Ingleton
On site | Toby Ingleton

South course at Apogee Club: New scenery for second act

Toby Ingleton reports on a design debut for the partnership of Mike Davis and Tom Fazio II, in the new course hotspot of south Florida

The art of golf
theberkshire.co.uk, The R&A World Golf Museum and National Galleries of Scotland
Feature | Adam Lawrence

The art of golf

Adam Lawrence profiles some of the best illustrators of golf courses in the game’s history – both full-time artists and architects who draw or paint

A masterplan of masters’ plans
Cohasse CC
Report | Mark Wagner

A masterplan of masters’ plans

Mark Wagner writes about the Tim Lewis-led renovation of Cohasse, a course that includes the work of Donald Ross and the sons of Frederick Law Olmsted

Quail Hollow: An interview with Tom Fazio
PGA of America/ Gary W. Kellner
Interview | Richard Humphreys

Quail Hollow: An interview with Tom Fazio

The architect talks about how this year’s PGA Championship venue has evolved over the past 30 years

Bringing golf to Benin
Afrikafun Production Stephane Brabant
Report | Richard Humphreys

Bringing golf to Benin

Jeremy Pern and Gregori International are creating the first 18-hole course in the West African country, on an ‘almost perfect’ site that also includes a sacred grove and voodoo shrines

The future of vegetation management on Melbourne’s Sandbelt
Lukas Michel/CDP
Opinion | Mike Clayton

The future of vegetation management on Melbourne’s Sandbelt

Mike Clayton discusses Alister MacKenzie’s transformative impact on Australian golf and how clubs can avoid repeating previous mistakes by establishing a long-term plan focused on indigenous plants

Maggie Hathaway: A force for good
Stephen Barton – Second Collective
On site | Adam Lawrence

Maggie Hathaway: A force for good

The reconstruction of the nine-hole course in Los Angeles is the golf industry at its best, says Adam Lawrence

Designs for the big screen
Pizá Golf
Interview | Richard Humphreys

Designs for the big screen

Chad Goetz and Agustin Piza discuss their design decisions for the virtual holes that featured in the first season of TGL

The ties that bind
Crooked Stick
Opinion | Justin Olmstead

The ties that bind

Justin Olmstead of Profile Products talks about the relationships behind the renovation of Crooked Stick in Indiana

Gopher Watch Competition – April 2025
Gopher Watch, News | Wed 16 Apr, 2025

Gopher Watch Competition – April 2025

Which course has Sandy the gopher visited this month?

MOST
POPULAR

FEATURED
BUSINESSES