Ross Perrett, also a brilliant artist with oils and watercolour. Steve Ritson, golf course designer & architect, and a member of the European Institute of Golf Course Architects - www.greentygerdesign.com Peter Thomson, golfer and architect.
1 Bobby Weed 2 Tom Weiskopf 3 Beau Welling, with Beau Welling Design 4 Robert W. White, golfer and architect 5 Chris Wilczynski, golf course architect - CW Golf Architects 6 Hugh Irvine Wilson 7 Derrell Witt 8 Norman H. Woods 9 Tiger Woods, with Tiger Woods Design
After spending time as a stockbroker MacDonald returned to golf as the game was brought to New York by Scottish immigrants. He then founded the Chicago Golf Club in 1892 with some associates and designed a simplistic nine-hole course, the first built west of the Allegheny Mountains.
Her work at The Springhaven Club made her part of golfing history as the first female architect of golf courses in the world. The master architect of the world-famous golf course St. Andrews was mother nature. Besides her though, we have to credit the amazing work of Allan Robertson.
Alister MacKenzie Regarded as one of the best golf course architects in golf, Alister MacKenzie's legacy is evident across many of the golf courses that feature within the Top 100 Golf Courses in the World.
Old Tom Morris, the “Grandfather of Golf”, was an innovator in greenskeeping and many modern golf course design techniques. Old Tom Morris got his start apprenticing for Allan Robertson and the pair worked together on a ten-hole design Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland in 1842.
Dick Wilson (golf course architect)Louis Sibbett "Dick" WilsonBornLouis Sibbett Wilson 1904 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United StatesDiedJuly 5, 1965NationalityAmericanOccupationGolf course architect1 more row
Golf course architecture is a specific discipline of landscape design, with many architects represented in the United States by the American Society of Golf Course Architects. Some architects are highly successful professional golfers who went on to design golf courses.
1. Pete Dye. Born into a family of golf course designers, Pete Dye followed in his father's footsteps to become one of the most famous golf architects in the country.
Tiger is one of the top golfers on the PGA Tour. Even though Tiger Woods hasn't retired from professional golf, that hasn't stopped him from designing the golf courses. And he has designed around ten golf courses so far, including his own practice facility in the backyard.
Alan Robertson, of St. Andrews, Scotland, was paid to layout out golf courses in the mid 1800s.
400 coursesAlthough an exact number is not known, Ross designed roughly 400 courses in the United States with more than 40 of those in North Carolina alone. A total of 31 states and four Canadian provinces can boast of Ross creations.
Table of contentsYardage book background and information.What you will need.Find your course.Screenshot images of each hole.Create a map of each hole and features.Add in the yardage book distances.Export your hole maps for printing.Printing and binding your yardage book.More items...•
William WatsonCourse Design And Experience. Hacienda is a classic and traditional golf course. In 1920, Alphonso Bell announced the purchase of the land for the course and William Watson was hired for its design. Watson was one of the very first golf professionals ever in California.
Jack Nicklaus, the globally renowned golf course designer and the greatest champion in the game's history with a record 18 professional major championships to his name, has confirmed that he is designing his first ever course in Saudi Arabia, a championship golf course for Qiddiya—Saudi Arabia's capital of ...
Golf course architects come from varying backgrounds, with training in landscape architecture, civil engineering, environmental studies, agronomy, golf course construction and professional golf, to name a few. The most common degree amongst golf architects is landscape architecture.
Golfers (left to right) Col. W. E. Wells, of West Virginia; Richard Tufts , the grandson of the Pinehurst Country Club founder; Donald Ross, the famous golf course architect; and Massachusetts Congressman Allen Towner Treadway, a former manager at Pinehurst, enjoy a round at Pinehurst. Courtesy of the Bettmann Archive and Getty Images
Outside of Boston, three of Flynn's holes built in 1927 on the Primrose Course at The Country Club at Brookline have been used in the Composite Course that hosted U.S. Opens in 1963 and 1988.
Robert Trent Jones, Sr. (1906 – 2000) Robert Trent Jones, Sr. has been credited with designing or redesigning over 500 golf courses throughout 45 states in the United States and 35 countries worldwide. Jones began his golf course architecture career after college as a partner with Canadian Stanley Thompson.
James Braid (1870 – 1950) Before getting into course design James Braid was first known as part of golf’s first “Great Triumvirate” of players along with Harry Vardon and J.H. Taylor.
The following year MacDonald expanded on his design to create an 18-hole course, making Chicago Golf Club the first full-length course in the United States. MacDonald’s next project began in 1908 with the construction of the National Golf Links of America, in Southampton, New York.
Following in his footsteps Willie Park Jr. won 2 Open Championships of his own in 1887 and 1889. As his playing career was coming to a close Willie Park Jr. got into designing golf courses becoming one of the early golf course architects.
The first golf course Maxwell designed was the Dornick Hills Golf and Country Club in Ardmore, Oklahoma. Maxwell while not formally trained in golf course architecture became one of the finest golf course architects of the time and designed nearly 70 courses and remodeled around 50.
Their work together include the Crystal Downs Country Club in Michigan, the Ohio State University Golf Course which Maxwell did the construction while MacKenzie did the design, the Melrose Country Club in Pennsylvania, and the Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club. The partnership ended after MacKenzie’s passing in 1934.
In 1907 a close friend Charles C. Worthington commissioned Tillinghast to design his first golf course the Shawnee Country Club in Shawnee on Delaware, Pennsylvania which opened in 1909.
Lee Schmidt & Brian Curley. Schmidt and Curley might be the most prolific golf course architects you've never heard of, as they have built dozens of golf courses around the world. In fact, the greatest concentration of their work can be found in China - at its two massive Mission Hills complexes, in particular.
Lester George. George is perhaps best known for two private golf club designs in Virginia - the outstanding Kinloch Golf Club in suburban Richmond, and the wild, wonderful Ballyhack Golf Club in Roanoke. But his public designs and redesigns are what earn him a place on this list.
With Tom Doak, Coore and Crenshaw and Gil Hanse earning recent acclaim for their minimalistic and rustic aesthetics, Eckenrode and his Origins Golf Design firm may be the next to join that pantheon. His highest-ranked course to date is the terrific Barona Creek Golf Club east of San Diego, and his Country Club of the Golden Nugget in Lake Charles, Louisiana, which opened last year, has received rave reviews as well.
In terms of visual drama and a tendency to stray from the ordinary, Jim Engh's design style is the closest to Mike Strantz's as any living architect . He described himself "not as a golf course architect, but as an endorphin salesman." His courses tend to have aggressive slopes and mounds on and around the greens, as well as his trademark "muscle bunkers," which have their own unique look. He has been most active out in the midwest and West, with the Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado and Tullymore Golf Club in Stanwood, Michigan being two of his best-known public layouts. We like when golf course architects push the envelope, and Engh is a master at doing just that.
JMP Golf Design. As part of the JMP Golf Design group, Bob Moore and his associates Brian Costello and Mark Hollinger have flown under the radar somewhat, but their courses tend to strike a nice balance of quality and affordability. We mentioned Cutter Creek in North Carolina a few weeks ago as such a course.
Liddy has long been one of Pete Dye's most trusted associates, having served as the construction manager and lead architect on many of Dye's best original courses and redesigns, including Bulle Rock in Maryland, Heron Point at Sea Pines Resort in South Carolina and the River Course at Kingsmill Resort in Virginia.
The 6th hole is a long par 4 that wraps around a pond. Brandon Tucker/Golf Advisor. The green on the short, par-4 7th hole at Sweetens Cove is one of the smaller and more severe on the course. Brandon Tucker/Golf Advisor. Biarritz-style green in play on the par-4 8th hole. Brandon Tucker/Golf Advisor.
Tom Doak studied Landscape Architecture at Cornell University where he won a scholarship to travel to the British Isles, he then spent seven months on the road, literally living on the links.
Pete Dye captained the college team in his youth before going on to qualify for the US Open in 1957. He won the Indiana State Amateur, took part in The Amateur in 1963 and played in five US Amateurs.
Harry Colt studied law at Clare College, Cambridge. Twelve months after his 1887 enrolment, he joined the committee of the Cambridge University Golf Club and in 1889 became the club's first captain.
Tom Fazio. Born in the northwestern suburbs of Philadelphia, Tom Fazio entered the business of golf course architecture as a teenager in 1962, assisting his uncle George in course construction. Read More >>. Gozzer Ranch is Tom Fazio’s foremost design that nobody has heard of.
Donald Ross worked with Old Tom Morris at St Andrews in 1893 then spent part of the following season at Carnoustie before returning to serve under the Dornoch club secretary John Sutherland.
Alister MacKenzie was born in England, but his parents were Scottish and the family holidayed every year close to where his father was raised in the traditional Clan MacKenzie lands of Sutherland.
Courses designed: East course at BallenIsles Country Club with partner Joe Lee (known as the Champions Course at the original PGA National Golf Club for the 1971 PGA Championship). South Course at NCR Country Club (1969 PGA Championship). Laurel Valley Golf Club (1965 PGA Championship).
Open). Pomonok Country Club (1939 PGA Championship). Red Course at Eisenhower Park Golf Club (1926 PGA Championships at what was then the five-course Salisbury Golf Club). Pelham Country Club (1923 PGA Championship).#N#Other majors impacted by his work: None.#N#Comment: Emmet, a name unrecognizable to most golf fans, designed a slew of early championship courses, although Pomonok CC no longer exists in upstate New York. It's debatable calling the Blue Course at Congressional an Emmet design since both Robert Trent Jones Sr. and his son, Rees Jones, have made ample revisions since 1957.#N#Total impact: Five designs and eight majors.
Rees Jones is known as "The Open Doctor" because of his U.S. Open course work, but he's done a few PGA Championship courses as well. Courtesy of Rees Jones, Inc.
Golf course architecture is a specific discipline of landscape design, with many architects represented in the United States by the American Society of Golf Course Architects. Some architects are highly successful professional golfers who went on to design golf courses.
O. Paul O'Brien, golf course designer & architect, and a member of the European Institute of Golf Course Architects - www.regolfdesign.com.
In 1904, the American architect designed an 18-hole golf course for The Springhaven Club. With impeccable fairways and greens, The Springhaven Club is suitable for golfers of any level.
Robert Trent Jones is probably one of the most repeated names in golf architecture, and not only because his father was also a well-known architect, but it’s also because in a career spanning over 50 years he built more than 300 courses all over the world. Some of these golf courses are The Real Club Valderrama, an exclusive golf course located in the south of Spain, Troia at Portugal, and even the 11th and 16th holes at Augusta National Golf Club.
The American architect, Pete Dye, once said, “Golf is not a fair game, so why build a course fair?”, and he meant it. Pete Dye designed more than 100 golf courses and many of them with his wife Alice Dye. Their golf courses constantly challenge you without relent. Some of their key elements are narrow greens, hazards and trees strategically placed to keep the game exciting and “unfair”.
He is known as the first architect who sought to build beautiful golf courses. Additionally, Tillinghast employed a wide variety of design ideas to his courses and he had no self-imposed limits concerning golf course architecture and aesthetics.
Perhaps Alister Mackenzie's greatest contribution to the world of golf course architecture is his almost seamless blending of strategic golf course architecture with artistic beauty. Without question, Mr. Ross is the most prolific of the old school golf designers.
Mackenzie has courses on the Monterrey Peninsula, the Sandbelt of Australia, and one that annually host a major golfing championship (The Masters), Perry Maxwell's gems are in northern Michigan, Oklahoma, and Kansas.
Tom Morris. Old Tom Morris is perhaps the most historic figure associated with the game of golf. He is that old man with the long gray beard holding a golf club in all the old golf pictures you've probably seen. He was the greens keeper at St. Andrews and has won the Open Championship many times over.
Tom Doak. Tom Doak is an architect that I think will continue to climb my Top Ten list as he builds more and more golf courses. He is already one of the greatest golf course architects of all-time with Unanimous Gems not only in the US, but on the international scene as well. Perhaps his landmark breakthrough was his design at Pacific Dunes, ...