California Golf Club of San Francisco

California Golf Club of San Francisco

California Golf Club of San Francisco
San Francisco, California

In 2007 the California Golf Club of San Francisco, one of the Bay Area's oldest and most respected private clubs, was completely renovated under the direction of Kyle Phillips Golf Course Design. The original A. Vernon Macan design was architecturally restored within the current property boundaries, using 1927 as a benchmark, when Dr. Alister Mackenzie re-bunkered the course.

Del Paso Country Club

Del Paso Country Club

Del Paso Country Club
Sacramento, California

Del Paso Country Club celebrated its 90th anniversary when the new course redesigned by Kyle Phillips opened for play July 2006. Founded in 1916, Del Paso once hosted tournaments that included legendary players such as Sir Henry Cotton and Tommy Armour, as well as the 1982 US Women's Open. The architectural personality of the original course designed by Scotsman John Black has been maintained while regaining its championship status.

Dundonald Links

Dundonald Links

Dundonald Links
Loch Lomond Golf Club, Troon

This Kyle Phillips link course can be added to the list of Royal Troon, Prestwick and Western Gailes, all connected by the historic Ayrshire rail line. Making its debut when the world of golf comes to Troon for The Open Championship in 2004, Dundonald has already been mooted as the future venue for the future venue for the Scottish Open.

Golf Eichenheim

Golf Eichenheim

Golf Eichenheim
Kitzbuhel-Aurach

The majestic Wilder Kaiser or "Wild King" mountain range serves as the backdrop for the Par Five, Tenth Hole at Golf Eichenheim. This Kyle Phillips design is the site of the Austrain Masters and is already one of the top-rated courses in Austria.

Kingsbarns Golf Links

Kingsbarns Golf Links

Kingsbarns Golf Links
St. Andrews

Near St. Andrews, Scotland, Kingsbarns is a magnificent seaside links course ranked among the Top 50 courses in the world by Golf Magazine 2001. It also received Golf Digest's Best New International Course in February 2001. Kingsbarns opened July 2000 and began hosting the Dunhill Links Championship in 2001.

The PGA of Sweden National Golf Resort

The PGA of Sweden National Golf Resort

The PGA of Sweden National Golf Resort
Troup

Only 30 minutes from Copenhagen, Denmark and 15 minutes from Malmo, Sweden, this scenic southern location offers players a longer golf season. This spectacular facility features the highest quality golf and training experience in Scandinavia, consisting of two new Kyle Phillips Golf Course Design championship courses and a nine hole short course. The Links Course, with its classic links-style architecture and traditional fescue grasses opens for play in May 2009.

The Grove

The Grove

The Grove
London

Beautifully situated along the Grand Union Canal on the site of a 17th Century English Estate, this Kyle Phillips course has been designed in a traditional English style. This course is part of a 300 acre five-star country estate located within 40 minutes of London’s West End.

Incline Village Championship and Mountain Course

Incline Village Championship and Mountain Course

Incline Village Championship & Mountain Course
Lake Tahoe, Nevada

Located on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe, Nevada. The Championship Course at Incline Village enjoys views of Lake Tahoe and the majestic Sierra Nevada Mountains. Originally designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. in 1964, the course was completely remodeled by Kyle Phillips and reopened in the fall of 2004.

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Monday, August 1, 2005

Back on Top at Tahoe

Fairways and Greens
By Vic Williams

THANKS TO AN INFLUX OF CASH, REDESIGN ACUMEN AND COMMUNITY PRIDE, INCLINE'S CHAMPIONSHIP COURSE HAS THAT CLASSIC GLOW AGAIN

If Kyle Phillips isn't careful, he'll replace Rees Jones as "The Open Doctor." He might even give modern design heavyweights like Jones and his brother, Robert Trent Jr., Pete Dye and the two Toms – Fazio and Doak – a run for their money.

In fact, most of the members at Incline Country Club in Incline Village, Nev., no doubt already include Phillips in that rarefied company. The proof of their praise is right outside their doors, high above Lake Tahoe, where the Championship Course at Incline Village has a bold and beautiful new look, a feisty yet friendly new feel and a much larger, more comfortable new clubhouse to complete the package.

Despite an accelerated time frame and various weather setbacks, Granite Bay-based Phillips – a globetrotting artist whose design at Kingsbarns in Scotland is a Top 50 dweller on many magazine lists – took Robert Trent Jones Sr.'s original 1968 routing and brought it up to 2ist century standards in impressive fashion. In essence, he squeezed miracles out of a $4.8 million budget.

Start with the greens: He reshaped and retrained every one of them, and already they read and run to perfection even at 6,500 feet above sea level.

He brought fairway bunkers out of irrelevance and back into play. He toughened up a slew of greenside traps; they're still classic in look and often caustic to one's score. He accentuated the water features, including a natural snow-fed stream running through the property. He shaved down landing areas so players can actually see where their drives land, where they're heading and where they're likely to stop.

And he brought the site's sublime sightlines – pines in the short range, mountains and sky and Tahoe itself further on – into more stirring focus than ever.

"A lot of what we did at Incline was cleaning it up," says Phillips, who's currently rebuilding Sacramento's venerable Del Paso Country Club from scratch.

"Getting the cart paths done properly, going to more formal, squared-off tees ... compared to what Mr. Jones had, yeah, it's different. Other than the concepts of the greens that he had stylistically, the rest of that course had been chewed up."

By "chewed up" he means nearly 40 years' worth of incremental in-house changes – money-saving measures that, collectively, took their toll on Jones' vision and the overall golf experience. Stir in decades of snow-and-thaw cycles, construction of adjacent homes over the decades and constant changes in equipment and maintenance technology, and you have the perfect recipe for a timely overhaul, which was complete last fall but revealed to the general public in May.

"Basically, we've put the 'championship'back in the Championship Course," Phillips says. "It's a nice site, with beautiful views of the lake. It represents Incline Village well now, and I'm happy for them."

The course's members, mostly well-heeled Incline Village residents and second-home owners packing the course's summer tee sheet, are ecstatic to have a shiny new (grown up?) baby to show off. Visitors lucky enough to secure a tee time find an engaging yet demanding mountain resort course that is completely new to them, whether they played it before or not. Management is fired up, too. Jeff Clouthier, Incline's superintendent since 2001, walked side by side with Phillips throughout the redesign process, from drawings to final shaping and sodding. He's still amazed that the course has reopened so soon, especially after the winter just passed dropped more than 20 feet of snow on the course, leading to drainage issues in the spring.

"We've had so much water, we haven't even been able to fire up our brand-new irrigation system, and I'm champing at the bit to do it," Clouthier said in early June as a light rain fell over the course. "We had a few voles digging holes over the winter, and we had to push our opening date back a few days because of the weather, but it's shaping up nicely."

By now the Championship Course should be at full force, with greens running between 9 and 10 on the Stimpmeter, creeks simmered down to a sweet-sounding trickle instead of a roar and native areas edging toward a gold. Overall, it presents as a fast-but-fair test — including bunkers that get your attention and greens that have the hint of familiarity.

"Certainly [the bunkers are] back in play" Phillips says. "It used to be if you were a really long hitter, you didn't even think about the bunkers on a number of shots. And though we changed all of the greens, we did GPS surveys of each one before we went to work. I thought a lot of the green concepts were good, and I'm not a fan of changing just to change.

"No. 13, for example, is a green I tried to rebuild very dose to what it was. No. 12 is totally new. So are 15 and 18. When Mr. Jones did these greens in the '60s, they were great greens, but now they were too fast. It's like Pasatiempo; if Alister MacKenzie were alive today, would he have three-foot tiers and five-degree slopes? The same with Incline; they now have more flexibility, with more pin positions."

One green Phillips completely changed is at No. 2, a par 5 of only 423 yards that could play as a par 4 during big tournaments. Despite Phillips' urgings, members voted to keep it a par 5, so he toughed up the green complex, deepening bunkers and shallowing the surface to repel long approaches.

Incline's 5-pars, in general, got a lot of work. "We chopped down areas so when you drive the ball, you can see where you're going. A lot of them were blind. In the case of No. 2, if you tried to lay up there, you'd go straight into the creek."

As for the 4-pars and 3-pars, Phillips was limited by housing and couldn't tag too many yards onto the shorter holes. No. 18, for instance, stretches to 420 yards, but it's all downhill with a severe dogleg left. "We did the best we could with that hole, made it a better driving hole. When Mr. Jones laid that out, it was never part of the plan to have houses in there. Back then you had views of the lake from 16 tee all the way through 18. Somebody made a lot of money, but the course sure suffered."

Though he supports Jones' original intent to close the round with a trio of holes stoked with great Tahoe views and possible birdies, Phillips says today's front nine is better. In a perfect world, he would switch incline's two sides, and it's hard not to agree. Even Augusta National eventually flip-flopped its layout, and look how that turned out.

But according to Clouthier, that'll never happen at Incline. "Unfortunately, several of the streets surrounding the course are named after the holes they're on," he says. "So they have to stay the way they are."

Thankfully that wasn't the mindset going into the Championship Course's long-overdue facelift. By hiring a naturalist like Phillips, the Incline ownership and membership knew they'd get the outcome they wanted, and by any measure, it's turned out even better than expected, right up there with the region's best, Coyote Moon and Old Greenwood included.

"It was a great course when it opened," Phillips says. "And now the pride in it has been renewed."

The Championship Course at Incline Village
INCLINE VILIAGE.NEV. (866) 925-60LF www.golfincline.com
RA1B: $155. $100 after 4 p.m., including cart

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