Interviews

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

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

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

Bob Harrison: Wizard of Oz

The Australian designer has had a long career and, like many of his countrymen, has spent much of it away from home. Adam Lawrence listened to his tales from the road

Ben Cowan-Dewar: Shock and awe

Golf development firm Cabot now has properties in six countries. Richard Humphreys speaks with co-founder and CEO Ben Cowan-Dewar about what makes a great site, selection of golf course architects, and more

Team building

Turfgrass has launched its US arm with the appointment of John Lawrence, Adam Moeller and Brad Owen. Richard Humphreys speaks with them, Turfgrass founder John Clarkin and director of agronomy Julian Mooney to find out more

Brian Curley: Life of Brian

The designer has surely clocked up more air miles than anyone else in the business. Adam Lawrence caught up with him in between flights to discuss his career and his new venture with Jim Wagner

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

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

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

Bob Harrison: Wizard of Oz

The Australian designer has had a long career and, like many of his countrymen, has spent much of it away from home. Adam Lawrence listened to his tales from the road

Ben Cowan-Dewar: Shock and awe

Golf development firm Cabot now has properties in six countries. Richard Humphreys speaks with co-founder and CEO Ben Cowan-Dewar about what makes a great site, selection of golf course architects, and more

Team building

Turfgrass has launched its US arm with the appointment of John Lawrence, Adam Moeller and Brad Owen. Richard Humphreys speaks with them, Turfgrass founder John Clarkin and director of agronomy Julian Mooney to find out more

Brian Curley: Life of Brian

The designer has surely clocked up more air miles than anyone else in the business. Adam Lawrence caught up with him in between flights to discuss his career and his new venture with Jim Wagner

AML
/ Categories: News

Stormy opening at Mach Dunes

David McLay Kidd’s much-awaited Machrihanish Dunes course on the Kintyre peninsula in Scotland opened on Tuesday. Unfortunately for the guests at the opening ceremony, which GCA attended, the Scottish weather didn’t cooperate: the sunny conditions of Monday were replaced by constant rain and a strong easterly wind.

Nevertheless, your intrepid reporter ventured out onto the links, and can report that the course does indeed occupy some of the most stunning terrain any golfer could ever hope to see. It is pretty extreme stuff though: the restrictions placed on the architect by the course’s planning consent – which essentially banned any disturbance of the land at all, except for the creation of greens and tees – combined with the site’s big dunes, means radical greens, more blindness than most golfers would see in a year and some hefty walks between holes to avoid sensitive areas. It starts from the very beginning: the first green, a punchbowl, is set in a deep hollow and is completely blind from most of the fairway, and the theme is continued for much of the round.

Everything at Machrihanish Dunes is predicated around the course’s environment. Fairways, except in a few areas, were simply mowed out of the existing grasses with no tilling or seeding; thus the sward is not yet the carpet of fescue one might expect on a course of this kind. No herbicides are permitted, so only time, foot traffic and the attentions of the sheep who will patrol the property will eliminate the weeds and undesirable grasses. Mowing the rough is prohibited, so those sheep can’t come too soon – at the moment, any ball hit in the rough will most likely be gone. 

Southworth Development, the American firm that bought a controlling interest in the project earlier this year, has said it is in for the long haul: it will need to be. Support from the Scottish Executive and its agency Highlands and Islands Enterprise, should hopefully ensure that getting to the course will become easier in the near future: improved ferry services for Kintyre, both from Scotland itself and from Northern Ireland are currently under discussion.

Those who venture to Machrihanish Dunes at the moment will need to abandon their preconceptions as to what a modern golf course looks like: it is nothing like that. Nor is it much like an old course nowadays; I suspect actually it has much in common with what new courses might have looked like towards the end of the nineteenth century. But the location is phenomenal, the project admirable, and the golf memorable. The course has many hurdles to overcome, of which the opening is really only one of the first, but it deserves to succeed.

Adam Lawrence

A full review of Machrihanish Dunes will appear in issue 18 of Golf Course Architecture.

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Sean Dudley

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