Fry/Straka restores Ross design on Belleair’s West course
Below are excerpts from an article that originally appeared in Golf Course Architecture.
Fry/Straka Global Golf Course Design is progressing with a restoration of the Donald Ross-designed West course at Florida’s Belleair Country Club, which celebrates its 125th anniversary this year.
The West course, which is set beside half a mile of frontage on Clearwater Bay, features 30 feet of elevation change, so is not typical of many of Florida’s flat golf course sites.
“After a full survey of the members, it was clear they desired and supported no mere run-of-the-mill renovation of the West course, but a restoration that embraced its historic significance and pedigree,” said Ed Shaughnessy, chief operating officer at Belleair. “The bunkers and greens definitely required reconstruction. That resolution led to several investigative, illuminating trips to the Tufts Archives in Pinehurst, where we learned just how important this design is, historically, and just how much documentation we have from Donald Ross himself – regarding both his original design effort in 1915, and his redesign in 1924. That information enabled us to make informed decisions culminating in a full and faithful restoration. That is what we’re producing.”
Every green is being rebuilt to USGA specification and restored according to Ross’s 1924 construction drawings. Straka and Belleair superintendent Andy Neiswender chose TifEagle ultradwarf for the putting surfaces, with Bimini bermuda everywhere else on the 120-acre West course property.
“A lot of older clubs struggle to show that Donald Ross was on site at all when he laid out their golf courses,” said Straka. “To have a course where Ross was on site so many times, for the initial design, and then for the remodel of his own work 10 years later – that’s incredibly rare. Then, to have such detailed construction drawings – and notes in the man’s own hand. That’s rarer still.
“What it allows, on one level, is the elimination of guesswork. We basically took all the plans from 1915 and 1924 and turned them into modern construction drawings. So, if Ross had a cop bunker seven feet high at 16, we’re building it seven feet high. Ross detailed a lot of ‘cop’ bunkers on this 1924 routing. These are mounds totally in play – what Ross called ‘the fair green’ – with sand faces covered in wiregrass. So that’s what we’re building, because Ross’s own cross-section drawings and notes tell us exactly how to construct them! When we’re finished, this course is going to be an amazing sort of time warp for the members.”
“Our restoration of the putting surfaces here has been akin to an archaeological dig,” said Straka, who is the current ASGCA president. “Here and elsewhere, we would excavate a green complex and find not one set of old drainage but two or three – all piled on top of each other! The inverted-saucer green, such a staple of the so-called ‘Ross style’, is a bit of a fallacy. Here and elsewhere, those putting surfaces became that way, over time, through multiple rebuilds and decades of top-dressing. Ross’s original plans for Belleair make that very clear. They show all but two of these greens were originally designed and built with entries at zero grade.
Click here to read the full article on golfcoursearchitecture.net.