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  • Grounds for Golf: The History and Fundamentals of Golf Course Design
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    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Art of Golf Design
    The Art of Golf Design
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  • Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
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  • The Golden Age of Golf Design
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  • The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
    The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
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  • Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
    Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
  • The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
    The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
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    The Riviera Country Club: A Definitive History
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Current Reading
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    The American Private Golf Club Guide
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    Unplayable: An Inside Account of Tiger's Most Tumultuous Season
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  • Cracking the Code: The Winning Ryder Cup Strategy: Make It Work for You
    Cracking the Code: The Winning Ryder Cup Strategy: Make It Work for You
    by Paul Azinger, Dr. Ron Braund
  • The Story of Golf, Official 2010 Edition
    The Story of Golf, Official 2010 Edition
  • Swinging from My Heels: Confessions of an LPGA Star
    Swinging from My Heels: Confessions of an LPGA Star
    by Christina Kim, Alan Shipnuck
  • Fifty More Places to Play Golf Before You Die: Golf Experts Share the World's Greatest Destinations (Fifty Places Series)
    Fifty More Places to Play Golf Before You Die: Golf Experts Share the World's Greatest Destinations (Fifty Places Series)
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    Follow up includes yours truly nominating Rustic Canyon. Shocking, I know.

  • Sports Illustrated The Golf Book
    Sports Illustrated The Golf Book
    by Editors of Sports Illustrated
  • Planet Golf USA: The Definitive Reference to Great Golf Courses in America
    Planet Golf USA: The Definitive Reference to Great Golf Courses in America
    by Darius Oliver

    The highly anticipated second volume comes to America for more design analysis and stunning photography.

  • Jenkins at the Majors: Sixty Years of the World's Best Golf Writing, from Hogan to Tiger
    Jenkins at the Majors: Sixty Years of the World's Best Golf Writing, from Hogan to Tiger
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  • The 19th Hole: Architecture of the Golf Clubhouse
    The 19th Hole: Architecture of the Golf Clubhouse
    by Richard Diedrich

    SI Golf Plus calls this the #1 golf book of 2008.

  • World Atlas of Golf: The Greatest Courses and How They are Played
    World Atlas of Golf: The Greatest Courses and How They are Played
    by Mark Rowlinson

    New and updated, including contributions from Ran Morrissett and Daniel Wexler.

Classics
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    The Book Of Golfers: A Biographical History Of The Royal & Ancient Game
    by Daniel Wexler


  • A Season In Dornoch: Golf and Life in the Scottish Highlands
    A Season In Dornoch: Golf and Life in the Scottish Highlands
    by Lorne Ruberstein

    A summer in Dornoch.

  • Emerald Gems:The Links of Ireland
    Emerald Gems:The Links of Ireland
    by Laurence Casey Lambrecht

    Beautiful images of the classic Irish links.

  • Golf Architecture in America: Its Strategy and Construction
    Golf Architecture in America: Its Strategy and Construction
    by Geo. C. Thomas
  • The Spirit of St. Andrews
    The Spirit of St. Andrews
    by Alister MacKenzie
  • Club Life: The Games Golfers Play
    Club Life: The Games Golfers Play
    by John Steinbreder
  • Discovering Donald Ross: The Architect and his Golf Courses
    Discovering Donald Ross: The Architect and his Golf Courses
    by Bradley S. Klein
  • Evangelist of Golf: The Story of Charles Blair MacDonald
    Evangelist of Golf: The Story of Charles Blair MacDonald
    by George Bahto
  • The Course Beautiful : A Collection of Original Articles and Photographs on Golf Course Design
    The Course Beautiful : A Collection of Original Articles and Photographs on Golf Course Design
    Treewolf Prod
  • Reminiscences Of The Links
    Reminiscences Of The Links
    by Albert Warren Tillinghast, Richard C. Wolffe, Robert S. Trebus, Stuart F. Wolffe
  • Gleanings from the Wayside
    Gleanings from the Wayside
    by Albert Warren Tillinghast
  • The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes
    The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes
    by Daniel Wexler
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« Tiger's Indefinite Leave, Vol. I've Lost Track | Main | "Tiger helped golfers, like me, who passionately love the game but am ashamed of the its 'history.'" »
Sunday
Jan032010

"Why would someone even consider trying to open a golf club nearly one-and-a-half times the size of Manhattan?"

I'm not sure where to start with Dan Washburn's fascinating account of the secret Mission Hills development under construction on Hainan. Here's primarily what you need to know:

In reality, this will be the world’s only self-contained golf city. Its 22 courses will cover every style imaginable – from links to desert to Augusta-like perfection – and include some decidedly non-traditional designs. Picture yourself playing into a waterfall, through a cave, around a volcano, or over a replica of the Great Wall. There will be multiple town centres with luxury homes and apartments, hotels and spas, shopping malls and streets lined with restaurants and bars. The Chus are turning countryside into suburbia, no doubt raising surrounding property values and creating thousands of jobs along the way.

And why 22 courses at one development on an island where there are said to be 3000 golfers?

But such quibbles may be missing the larger truth about golf course development in Hainan, and throughout much of China: the number of golf courses built has very little to do with the number of golfers available to play on them. With few exceptions, golf courses exist to help sell luxury villas. Developers do not worry if a course sits empty, as long as the properties around it sell. And so far in Hainan, selling homes has not been a problem. Wealthy bosses from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and central China’s coal belt fly in and buy up the villas, sometimes several at a time, often paying in cash. In China, to own a home on a golf course does not necessarily mean you play the game. It’s more about prestige. Golf, like luxury sedans and handbags, is just another way to project your wealth.

The concept sounds familiar. Anyone know how it's working out?

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Reader Comments (10)

I played a tournament at Mission Hills in Shenzhen last year and although it was an awe-inspiring facility, I couldn't help but wonder how well the courses were being utilized. I mean, do they really need 12 courses in one facility? Then I played with a couple of locals who own property alongside the World Cup course, and quickly realized just what this article suggested...its not about the golf, its about the status symbol. Golf course development in China is like a show-off match between the rich..."Mine's bigger than yours"...
Land consolidation? Surely they mean 'please replace your divots'? Must be a mistake in the translation. It does seem like a very big divot, though, reading the article.

I was so overwhelmed to be playing at a new resort course that on the first tee I reminded my caddie to make sure he picked up all the divots. After the game I was getting my car keys out of the bag and it was full of divots.
01.3.2010 | Unregistered CommenterPickworth
The only thing the author doesn't seem to get is the gigantic demand for this type of development. As China comes out of developing nation status into developed nation status, the demand for housing and other amenities will make the US look like the third world. It's funny that the first poster says "Golf course development in China is like a show-off match between the rich..."Mine's bigger than yours" - when you could easily replace China with America. I'm often amazed at how people are not able to look at themselves but are quite capable of seeing the "faults" in others.
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterPress Agent
Why should China be protected from their own "housing bubble?" . . . Are their investment banks and rating firms getting prepared to package mortgages into AAA rated CDOs once the all cash buyers are tapped out? . . . Guy can make a lot of money shorting those.
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterWisconsin Reader
This is a very interesting article. If China repeats the worst environmental mistakes that US golf courses have made over the years, but in a very short time period and in denser geographical areas, then what will the long term impact be?
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterJim
Jim - I wonder what US environmental mistakes you are talking about? Without the golf course in a golf course development, you just end up with development.
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterJoe Jemsek
"I wonder what US environmental mistakes you are talking about?"

Well, let's see:
Palm Springs
Phoenix
Tuscon
Plus other assorted golf courses/developments built in any desert.

Virtually all of the water in the first three is mined from underground or taken from the Colorado River watershed. Mined water is not being replaced at anywhere near the rate necessary to maintain aquifer content and the Colorado Delta has gone from a verdant riparian forest containing jaguars to a mostly dry mud flat in the living memory of some people still around. Not that golf itself is the worst offender here, but a golf course made of grass planted in a desert is ugly, unsustainable, and a stupid environmental mistake.
Are these courses and the houses/ amenities on the same level as The Madison Club?

www.madisonclubca.com
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterSteven T.
Why do I think that Bobby Ginn is boarding a jet to China to help them with sales?
01.4.2010 | Unregistered CommenterBrad Ford
Mission Hills (the 12 courses in ShenZhen) is typically fully booked on weekends. As are most of the 60 or so courses in the Pearl river delta area.

Hainan Island is a destination resort (tropical sandy beaches etc.), about 1 hour flght from Hong Kong, 2 from Sinapore/Malaysia, 5 from Korea / Japan, not to mention the rest of China that has a rapidly expanding middle class, so the size of the local population is not so relevant.

Housing bubble very likely on the way, at least in the major cities such as Beijing & Shanghai from the looks of things.
01.4.2010 | Unregistered Commenterdrg

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