At Home
One of the most beautiful—and most interesting—courses to
open recently is APDC’s course at Newport Dunes Golf Club in
Port Aransas, Texas. The privately owned club is currently open
for public play, and it’s well worth booking a trip to Texas’ Gulf
Coast to take advantage. Step onto Newport Dunes and you’re
transported out of Texas to, believe it or not, Scotland. This linksstyle
course winds through the natural dunes of the Texas coast
and comes complete with fast greens, deep sod stacked revetment
bunkers, oversized water hazards and plenty of native rough.
Newport Dunes is certainly the only course of its kind in Texas.
Newport Dunes (Hole #12) in Port Aransas brings links
golf to the Texas gulf coast.
A world away in terms of the style of golf, but not far
away on the map, White Oak Golf & Equestrian Community
is getting ready to open. The exquisite Arnold Palmer Signature
course is located near Tryon, NC, on land first deeded to a local
family by King George II in 1743. This residential community
will feature horse trails, waterfalls, lush meadows, fishing areas,
tennis facilities, an Activity Center with pools and a spa, and
even a Celestial Observatory. The Palmer course will hold a
great game, while the hills above it will hold a vineyard. With
approximately 600 homes planned and a mild four-season
climate, White Oak Golf & Equestrian Community is a great
place to have an address—no wonder three time major winner
Padraig Harrington will call it home.
On the other side of the state, the team at North
Carolina State University is closer to practicing on a new
course that will be all its own—finally. Up until now, the team
has had to practice on public courses but APDC is setting
them up well—perhaps they have a vested interest: APDC
Architect Brandon Johnson and Executive Vice President Erik
Larsen both graduated from the school. Good news for the
team, Johnson says the course is close to finished.
“They’ve basically grassed the entire course,” he says. The
heavy rain hasn’t helped, but Johnson says the course should be
open mid- to late summer next year.
Another great facility in North Carolina opened this year.
On June 7, the beautiful Seven Falls Golf & River Club near
Hendersonville celebrated the opening of its practice facility and
par-3 course. Featuring top-drawer residences and great golf on
the banks of the French Broad River, Seven Falls will eventually
offer one of the first Palmer Premier golf course developments. It
will also offer great fishing and other recreational opportunities.
Until the whole thing gets rolling the practice facility, which
comprises a 20-acre driving range and 25-acre practice course,
gives a taste of the good life that’s on the way.
“It’s more of a par-3 plus,” says Layton. “That was at the
request of the owner. He wanted to be able to practice every
shot you’d encounter on the golf course. You can hit every club
in the bag, starting with a lob wedge and going all the way
through to a driver. There’s even a 450 yard, par-4 in there.”
Seven Falls’ full course should open in 2009.
Also if you missed it this summer, the APDC course
at Balsam Mountain Preserve opened June 6 in nearby Sylva.
As much an experience in nature as it is a residential golf
development, 3,000 of the development’s 4,400 acres are protected
by conservation easements, ensuring everyone who lives at Balsam
Mountain Preserve will feel right at home for years to come. An
onsite Nature Center and naturalist will help residents appreciate the community, while plenty of trails for hiking and mountain
biking will ensure they get out and enjoy it.
U.S. courses in South Carolina, California and Florida are
also in development and should be looking green relatively soon.
Tropical Game
Head south from Texas, and you will find Garabu, a new
Signature course in Costa Rica under development. David
Couch, the lead architect on the project, says “it’s beautiful, we’ve
already completed the master plan and feel really good about the
routing of the golf course” he says. “It’s going to be big” Couch
says. The tropical course will provide a fairly friendly experience
along with breathtaking beauty while still challenging the very
best players. Additionally, Garabu will have a world class practice
facility, and a short game area. Muy Bueno!
Further to the south, APDC Architect Eric Wiltse says
a new course in Brazil is going to be fantastic, not least because
of the amazing views. “It looks like Kentucky a little bit,” he
says, explaining that the property, just outside of Sao Paolo, is
on a horse farm, complete with rolling hills and white fences.
“It’s really nice,” he says. “It will probably end up being the
highest-end development in Brazil for a while.”
Off the continent, the West End development in the
Bahamas is well underway. It’s more than halfway done, but
likely won’t be grassed until the beginning of 2009. Wiltse says
it should be playable by the end of next fall, and that it’s going
to be great. “There’s one hole that’s right on [the water], and
it’s probably the closest we’ve ever built to the water,” he says.
“So you know it’s going to be a nice golf course.”
Another course is underway in St. Lucia, but we’ll have
to wait for details. Don’t forget the sunscreen.
Passport–Worthy
On the other side of the world in China, a course in Kunming
is progressing well.
“They’re in the middle of it,” says Johnson. “They’re
working pretty diligently, pushing to get a March deadline
completed. It’s very ambitious.”
Johnson says the team on the ground in China has been pushing hard to get the course done—and we’re happy
about that. Not exactly down the street, this course is going
to be amazing if not a little difficult, as Johnson explains.
With elevation changes of 300 feet above a large mountain
lake in Kunming, there are canyons, gorges and lakeside
play—meaning challenges aplenty. In addition to the beauty
on course, Johnson says the clubhouse will be something to see
as well; built in a kind of Balinese style, with wide doors open
to the wind that will allow incredible views. Should be great.
Another great Chinese course, Beijing Cascades (near
Beijing, of course) features giant waterfalls, 7,000 newly planted
trees and an amazing amount of hard work behind the 7,272
yards. It’s built to be the finest in the country, and it’s already
been recognized as just that; Golf Magazine China awarded
Beijing Cascades “Best New Course in China 2007–2008.”
Further south in Cambodia, APDC vice president John
Hamilton says a 36-hole development at Hong Chu is going
to set the bar for Southeast Asian golf. Currently in the design
phase, the development is set in a national park just three hours
south of Phnom Penh. Tigers, elephants, carnivorous plants
and all manner of exotica could factor into play—no kidding.
Also in Southeast Asia, Hamilton says courses are planned
for Vietnam: an 18-hole course at a casino resort complex in Da
Nang, and a 36-hole development in Ho Chi Minh City that
will offer both links-style golf and a resort-style course. All the
more reason to keep your passport up to date.
Along the Way
Between China and Texas, APDC is planning an exciting
new course for the island of Mauritius, off the west coast
of Madagascar. Recently underway, Wiltse says the routing
is basically finalized. “The whole place is being built from
scratch,” he says. “There’s nothing out here but scrub; just coral
and volcanic rock.” With a 1,000-foot mountain on the island
and plenty of volcanic terrain, this should be a unique—and
beautiful—place to lose a few balls among the rocks.
Other places soon to feature APDC courses include
Russia, the United Arab Emirates, Ireland and Portugal. We’re
guessing there’s plenty more on deck for the U.S. as well, and
with our frequent flier miles piling up, we can’t wait to see
where the next course will open. Catch you on the road.
Costa Rica's Garabu will be a stunner