Ever since the idea to build a golf course out at
the far northwest corner of the former Naval Air Station became
viable, Kay Miller (who has been running the re-development effort
out there) has had a picture specific type of golf course on the
wall in her office.
The picture is of of the Old Course at St. Andrews , Scotland .
The original "Links" golf course. The land that
the new golf course at Alameda Point will be built on is perfect
for a Links course.
A true Links course, like the home of golf in Scotland , is a relatively
flat course built on sandy soil that connects or "links"
the land with the ocean. The land the new golf course at Alameda
Point will rest on is relatively flat and "links" to the
waters of the bay. The city of San Francisco looks so close
you might well say this land also "links" to the city.
With this in mind, it came as no surprise that the man selected
to complete the first phase of development for our new golf course
is the man who is currently designing and building a true Links
course a few miles down the shoreline from that Old Course at St.
Andrews in Scotland.
The Alameda committee of Miller, Dana Banke, Tony Corica, Leslie
Zander and Elizabeth Johnson eschewed proposals from the likes of
Robert Trent Jones II and Robert Muir Graves to award the $50,000
feasibility study contract to golf course architect Kyle Phillips
on Feb. 20.
"I thought it had an excellent location," Phillips said.
"And the technical and environmental challenges interest me.
This is a unique property for Alameda ."
Phillips has developed a reputation for finding solutions to difficult
environmental and planning issues on a multitude of terrain while
designing golf courses for more than 60 clients in over 20 countries.
When he left the Robert Trent Jones II firm to hang his own shingle
in July of last year, the first project he landed was a dream: To
rebuild and re-design the old Kingsbarns Links seven miles down
the coast from the Old Course at St. Andrews.
The Links at Kingsbarns was first played over nine holes before
Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo in 1815. But the course was
used for maneuvers in World War II and never restored. The
Nov. 16, 1997 issue of the St. Andrews Sunday Post called the course,
"perhaps the last pure Links to be built in Scotland ."
Working with Phillips as a consultant will be Walter Woods, retired
head greenskeeper of the Old Course.
When I first saw the property, "Phillips said, "I wondered
how the guys at Pebble Beach felt when they first walked the site.
It's an incredible opportunity. Seven holes play directly
down the shoreline and the rest have splendid views of the North
Sea and distant Angus coastline. We started construction last
fall and it will be done in the late summer."
So we have a man who knows Links and does Links. But in Alameda
there are two other problems which must be dealt with - environmental
concerns (a habitat for the least tern) and whether dredgings from
the Estuary will be a suitable base for the course.
Phillips scores high in experience in both areas of concern.
He designed the Resort at Squaw Creek Golf Course in Squaw Valley
, widely considered to be the most environmentally responsive course
ever constructed, with two-thirds of the layout dedicated to wetlands.
And in Aruba he designed and constructed a course with imported
sand, much like the dredgings will be in Alameda.
"We have an opportunity to go in and create a golf course
with this dredge material in Alameda ," Phillips said.
"Part of our investigation will be to look into the dredging,
work with them, find out more about the material. How that
material will work, to create a much better environment than exists
there now - it's a runway - to create a habitat for the least tern...these
are the questions that intrigue me, the challenges that interest
me."
Phillips believes that the new golf course at Alameda Point can
be a top-level golf experience.
"A lot of people would like to have a very high-end product,
but they don't have the site or the location," he said.
"But this is a very unique property in Alameda."
Philllips lived in Fremont while he worked as a vice president
and designer at Robert Trent Jones II. He moved to one of
his proudest creations, Granite Bay GC near Roseville in the Sacramento
area, to hang his own shingle. But no matter where Phillips
lives, he is always on the go. The real money in golf course design
is overseas. For instance, in May he begins construction on
a course in Austria . His interest in the Alameda property
is a compliment to that site.
"With the experience Kyle has had with some really big developments,
we want that," Golf Manager Dana Banke said. "He
has a proven track record."
Phillips should finish the feasibility study by June. He
will also then have his foot in the door as the architect for the
project. |