"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?





















Sunday, January 3, 2010 at 08:09 PM
Reader Comments (10)
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.
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.
www.madisonclubca.com
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.