Reciprocal Clubs Procedures for Using Reciprocal Clubs
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21-002Afdp – Country Club at Muirfield Village
Planning and Zoning Commission January 21, 2020 21-002AFDP – COUNTRY CLUB AT MUIRFIELD VILLAGE Summary Zoning Map This is a request for review of an Amended Final Development Plan. The proposal is for modifications to a previously approved AFDP to allow for the relocation of four pickleball courts, as well as modifications of an adjacent patio on the 79.66-acre site. Site Location West of Muirfield Drive, approximately 1,700 feet northwest of the intersection with Memorial Drive. Zoning PUD, Planned Unit Development District – Muirfield Village Property Owners Country Club at Muirfield Village Applicant/Representative Matt Toddy, Design Collective Applicable Land Use Regulations Zoning Code Section 153.050 Case Manager Zach Hounshell, Planner I (614) 410-4652 [email protected] Next Steps Upon approval from the Planning and Zoning Commission for the Amended Final Development Plan, the applicant is eligible to file for building permits. PLANNING 5200 Emerald Parkway Dublin, Ohio 43017 phone 614.410.4600 dublinohiousa.gov City of Dublin Planning and Zoning Commission Case 21-002AFDP | Country Club at Muirfield Village Thursday, January 21, 2021 | Page 2 of 5 1. Context Map City of Dublin Planning and Zoning Commission Case 21-002AFDP | Country Club at Muirfield Village Thursday, January 21, 2021 | Page 3 of 5 2. Overview Background The site was zoned PUD, Planned Unit Development District, as part of the Muirfield Village development in the early 1970s. The development plan evolved from the original plan to include 2,700 dwelling units and two golf courses. The Country Club building is located at the center of the parcel at the end of the entrance drive from Muirfield Drive. -
Case 20-136Afdp – Country Club at Muirfield Village
Planning and Zoning Commission September 17, 2020 CASE 20-136AFDP – COUNTRY CLUB AT MUIRFIELD VILLAGE Summary Zoning Map This is a request for review and approval of an Amended Final Development Plan. The proposal is for renovations to the existing pool house and clubhouse patio bars, and the addition of four pickleball courts on the 79.66-acre site. Site Location West of Muirfield Drive, approximately 1,700 feet northwest of the intersection with Memorial Drive. Zoning PUD, Planned Unit Development District – Muirfield Village Property Owners Country Club at Muirfield Village Applicant/Representative Matt Toddy, Design Collective Applicable Land Use Regulations Zoning Code Section 153.050 Case Manager Zach Hounshell, Planner I (614) 410-4652 [email protected] Next Steps Upon approval from the Planning and Zoning Commission for the Amended Final Development Plan, the applicant is eligible to file for building permits. PLANNING 5200 Emerald Parkway Dublin, Ohio 43017 phone 614.410.4600 dublinohiousa.gov City of Dublin Planning and Zoning Commission Case 19-136AFDP | Country Club at Muirfield Village Thursday, September 17, 2020 | Page 2 of 6 1. Context Map City of Dublin Planning and Zoning Commission Case 19-136AFDP | Country Club at Muirfield Village Thursday, September 17, 2020 | Page 3 of 6 2. Overview Background The site was zoned PUD, Planned Unit Development District, as part of the Muirfield Village development in the early 1970s. The development plan evolved from the original plan to include 2,700 dwelling units and two golf courses. The Muirfield Village master plans are conceptual in nature and do not provide any level of detail for this facility, showing only the development of the Country Club golf course on this site. -
Spotlight Ken Benoit and Glenarbor to Host Season- Opening Two-Ball Qualifier
ßoard of Directors M et G C S A est 1959 P resident GLEN DUBE, CGCS Centennial Golf Club Vice President DAVID DUDONES Westchester Country Club Treasurer KENNETH BENOIT JR., CGCS GlenArbor Golf Club Cover: GlenArbor Golf Club Secretary R O B E R T B. A L O N ZI JR . Fenway Golf Club Past President BLAKE HALDERMAN, CGCS Brae Burn Country Club D irectors MICHAEL BRUNELLE, CGCS Upper Montclair Country Club BRETT CHAPIN Redding Country Club DOUG DRUGO Wee Burn Country Club STEVEN McGLONE Siwanoy Country Club VINCENT PAVONETTI, CGCS Fairview Country Club ROBERT WOLVERTON Century Country Club Class “C” Rep DAVID PARSON The Apawamis Club Class “AF” Rep ROBERT STEINMAN, CGCS Pocono Turf Executive Director ED BROCKNER Executive Secretary ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ SUSAN O ’DOWD John O’Keefe Looks Forward to Year Ahead Tee t# Green Staff as GCSAA President E ditor JIM PAVONETTI 203-531-8910 Managing Editor PA N D O RA C. W OJICK Editorial Committee TODD APGAR STEVEN MCGLONE Chapter N ew s....................................................................................................... 5 fMATTCEPLO BOB NIELSEN KEVIN COLLINS SCOTT NIVEN ■¡NDY DROHEN TOM REYES M em ber News .................................................................................................... 9 I CH IP LAFFERT Y GREG W OJICK ! Designer Spotlight ............................................................................................................. 10 TERRI E YOUNG Advertising Manager U pcom in g Events ............................................................................................ 12 MIKE BRUNELLE, 973-777-6710 TEE TO GREEN is published bimonthly by the Metropolitan Golf Course Superintendents Association 49 Knollwood Road, Elmsford, NY 10523-2819 914-347-4653, FAX: 914-347-3437, METGCSA.ORG WËL Copyright ©2015 * y \ m \ m h Missile 1 I ♦ / * do all winter? A year doesn’t go by without my having to share the answer to that question with No Rest for board members or golfers. -
Ron Arnst's HMG Course Collection Summaries
HISTORY MAKER GOLF Championship Golf Game • Course Summaries Course Collection ONE Blackjack GC, Las Vegas NV / based on TPC SUMMERLIN TPC Summerlin’s layout, carved from a magnificent swath of rugged desert terrain by renowned golf course architect Bobby Weed, provides a good reference for the Blackjack GC. TPC Summerlin’s lush bentgrass greens, numerous water features and an abundance of pine trees all contrast dramatically with undisturbed desert washes. The course features four closing holes that deliver top flight golf drama. The final charge begins with the par 4, 15th hole – a drivable par 4 that will temp most players. If the tee shot misses the green, an “up and down” birdie is possible, but not easy, due to the severely elevated and undulated green – which is surrounded by five bunkers that regularly attract stray tee shots. The 16th hole is a relatively downhill par-5 that is reachable with two good shots. The green is guarded by water short of the green, and bunkers beyond. Only a mid-iron will be necessary for the second shot, with a birdie almost a certainty. A challenging and un-nerving par-3, the 17th hole plays downhill with the green guarded closely by a lake on the left and by bunkers on the right. Par is good score and birdies are rare, should players need to make up ground. The 18th is a well-designed and strategic finishing hole which moves right to left off the tee. The green is protected on the left by a lake. An aggressive tee shot with the driver can leave the player just a short iron to a very deep green from front to back. -
US Amateur Championship Preview
History of the U.S. Amateur Championship The U.S. Amateur Championship was born in 1895 due to a controversy. In 1894, two clubs - Newport (R.I.) Golf Club and New York's St. Andrew's Golf Club - had conducted invitational tournaments to attract the nation's top amateur players. Newport's stroke play tournament was won by club member W.G. Lawrence, who triumphed over a field of 20 competitors. The match-play competition at St. Andrews attracted 27 golfers and was won by Laurence Stoddart, of the host club. Both clubs proclaimed their winners as the national champion. Clearly, golf needed a national governing body to conduct national championships, develop a single set of rules for all golfers to follow, and to promote the best interests of the game. With that, representatives from five clubs founded the USGA on Dec. 22, 1894. As a result, in 1895, its first full year of operation, the USGA conducted the National Amateur and Women's Amateur Championship as well as the Open Championship. The National Amateur and Open Championships were conducted at Newport Golf Club during the same week of October and Charles B. Macdonald became the first U.S. Amateur champion. The Amateur Championship is the oldest golf championship in this country - one day older than the U.S. Open. Many of golf’s greatest players had held the U.S. Amateur title. It was, however, longtime amateur Robert T. Jones Jr., who first attracted media coverage and spectator attendance at the Amateur Championship. Jones captured the championship five times (1924, 1925, 1927, 1928, 1930). -
Vol. 11, No.2 Development of Local Green Sections This Number of the Bulletin Contains Reports of the Activities of 30 Organizat
22 Vol. 11, No.2 Development of Local Green Sections This number of the Bulletin contains reports of the activities of 30 organizations interested primarily in golf course turf. The Green Section is not directly responsible for the formation nor the manage- ment of any of the organizations listed in this number, but it has from their start cooperated in one way or another with most of them. Some of these organizations are confined to members of green com- mittees and some to greenkeepers, while others are organized on a broader basis to admit to membership all individuals who are inter- ested in growing turf. The large number of these organizations is significant in indicating the growing interest in turf problems. All of these organizations have been formed since the establishment of the Green Section of the United States Golf Association in 1920. It is interesting to note that the first local green section was started in Philadelphia in 1921. The first organization of greenkeepers was the Greenkeepers' Club of New England, which held its first meeting in 1924. The purpose in presenting all these reports in one number of the Bulletin is to call attention to the large number of organizations that are interested in turf culture throughout the country. The reports show that some of these organizations have extensive programs for the year, while others are relatively inactive. A review of the many programs given in the following reports should furnish program com- mittees of these organizations with many helpful suggestions for the 1931 -
1500+ 1.6 Million+ 700+ $2.5 Billion+
OUR COMPANY OUR ABILITIES OUR EXPERIENCE ® PRIVATE CLUB PLANNERS & CONSU LTANTS Who We Serve: THE TEAM Country, golf, city, dining, athletic, yacht, university and gated community clubs, throughout the United States, Canada, Asia and the Caribbean. Founded in 1983, with a professional staff We have served clubs throughout the world in all of strategic planners, architects, funding aspects of their facilities, strategic planning, golf, specialists, survey/marketing clubhouse, membership, operations OVER Bill McMahon, Sr. specialists, graphic designers 38 and dining needs along with 2000 and PhD marketing/consumer YEARS providing research to forecast CLUBS I researchers, we know clubs. N B U S I N E S S the future trends in society. S E R V E D Who We Are: Our principals have served their own clubs as board members, presidents and consultants. As club specialists, we write extensively on club issues for Club Trends with NCA, assist GCSAA with Frank Vain ongoing club research and provide CMAA and their managers with continuing information on clubs at their chapters, world conference and via regularly conducted education sessions and webinars. $2.5 BILLION+ 1,500+ In Approved Clubhouse & Membership Surveys Completed Chris Coulter Golf Course Projects The only club database representing the Most experienced club facility planning firm. club member consumer 1.6 MILLION+ 700+ Martha Acker Survey Responses Representing Strategic Plans Developed Club Members & Spouses Providing the experience and expertise to make strategic Allowing us to build the national plans become reality. We not only help develop the plans, benchmarking database. we have the in-houseexpertise to actually implement them. -
New England CMAA Annual Report 2019
New England CMAA Annual Report 2019 Presented At the Annual Membership Meeting Wollaston Golf Club Milton, MA October 21, 2019 1 2019 Officers 2019 Directors Jeff Isbell, CCM Carol Bliss, CCM Chilton Club President North Andover Country Club Emily Goldman, CCM Gregory Cincotta, CCM, CCE The Country Club Secretary Stephen Kohr, CCM Concord Country Club Woodland Golf Club Neal Vohr, CCM, CCE Treasurer Geoff Piva University Club of Boston Lanam Club Robert Shorter, CCM Christopher Barron, CCM Immediate Past President Beverly Yacht Club Thorny Lea Golf Club Jason Silbovitz, CCM Bellevue Country Club Megan Spies St. Botolph Club Upcoming NECMA Events Fall CMI Workshop, Vesper Country Club November 13th, 2019 NE CMAA/NECMA Foundation Business Expo, Andover Country Club January 13th, 2020 93rd CMAA Annual World Conference on Club Management February 8th-12th, 2020 Grapevine, TX 2 President’s Report Jeff Isbell, CCM October is time to celebrate for the New England Chapter CMAA. While this month marks the beginning of our fiscal year, the Annual Meeting allows the opportunity to fondly reminisce over the year that was and look forward with renewed enthusiasm to the upcoming year. So as The Hallmark Channel begins to air Christmas movies this week (WAY TOO EARLY) it got me to thinking that the Annual Meeting is essentially our Chapter’s New Year’s Eve. The Chapter kicked off a great year of events in January with the first Annual Foundation Expo. This day long event included multi- leveled education, fantastic networking, and meaningful connections with our very important trade partners. The 2020 Expo will be held again in January hosted at Andover Country Club so please watch your inboxes and RSVP as soon as you can. -
2015-16 PGA TOUR Schedule for RELEASE
2015-2016 PGA TOUR Schedule 2015-2016 FedExCup Season (47 events) DATE TOURNAMENT TV NETWORKS GOLF COURSE(S) LOCATION O 12-18 Frys.com Open GOLF Silverado Resort and Spa (North Course) Napa. CA 19-25 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open GOLF TPC Summerlin Las Vegas, NV N 26-1 CIMB Classic GOLF Kuala Lumpur Golf & Country Club Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2-8 World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions GOLF Sheshan International Golf Club Shanghai, China 2-8 Sanderson Farms Championship GOLF Country Club of Jackson Jackson, MS 9-15 OHL Classic at Mayakoba GOLF El Camaleon Golf Club at the Mayakoba Resort Playa del Carmen, MX 16-22 The McGladrey Classic GOLF Sea Island Resort (*Seaside Course, Plantation Course) St. Simons Island, GA BREAK J 4-10 Hyundai Tournament of Champions GOLF Kapalua Resort (The Plantation Course) Kapalua, HI 11-17 Sony Open in Hawaii GOLF Waialae Country Club Honolulu, HI CareerBuilder Challenge PGA WEST (*Stadium Course, Nicklaus Tournament Course); La 18-24 GOLF La Quinta, CA in partnership with the Clinton Foundation Quinta Country Club 25-31 Farmers Insurance Open GOLF / CBS Torrey Pines Golf Course (*South Course, North Course) La Jolla, CA F 1-7 Waste Management Phoenix Open GOLF / NBC TPC Scottsdale (Stadium Course) Scottsdale, AZ *Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course, Monterey 8-14 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am GOLF / CBS Pebble Beach, CA Peninsula Country Club (Shore Course) 15-21 Northern Trust Open GOLF / CBS Riviera Country Club Pacific Palisades, CA 22-28 The Honda Classic GOLF / NBC PGA National -
Why Golf Entertainment Centers Are Booming | Advisers of the Year
Why golf entertainment centers are booming | Advisers of the Year Ryan Doerr President/Owner Strategic Club Solutions MAY/JUNE 2019 Renovation of the Year Adare Manor in Ireland takes top honors with infrastructure-focused design. How much ›› WATER ›› LABOR ›› MONEY could your facility save with a Toro Irrigation System? ——————— LET’S FIND OUT. Toro.com/irrigation STAFF Editorial Team Jack Crittenden Editor-in-Chief [email protected] May/June 2019 Volume No. 28 Issue No. 3 877-Golf-Inc Keith Carter Managing Editor Jim Trageser OPERATIONS Assistant Managing Editor Mike Stetz Katie Thisdell 4 News: More golfers in 2018, but Robert Vasilak weather puts damper on year Senior Editors 7 Trend: Drones give courses an eye in James Prusa, Editor-at-Large, Asia the sky Tiffany Porter, Copy Editor 10 Feature: Why everyone’s investing in 10 Shannon Harrington, Art Director golf entertainment centers Richard Steadham, Senior Designer Publishing Team Katina Cavagnaro Publisher [email protected] OWNERSHIP & MANAGEMENT Shelley Golinsky, National Account Representative Mindy Palmer, Marketing and Sales Consultant 16 News: Troon acquires OB Sports Elizabeth Callahan, Audience Development Director 20 Trend: It’s becoming a seller’s market Aleisha Ruiz, Audience Marketing & Event Coordinator 22 Feature: We spotlight the year’s top 22 Trish Newberry, Accounting consultants and advisers New Paid Subscriptions: Please call 877-Golf-Inc Complimentary Subscriptions: Golf Inc. provides a complimentary print DEVELOPMENT & DESIGN subscription to -
Good Morning and Welcome to Media Day for the 2017 Genesis Open
MEDIA DAY January 23, 2017 MIKE ANTOLINI: Good morning and welcome to Media Day for the 2017 Genesis Open. My name is Mike Antolini and I'm the tournament director and vice president of championships for the Tiger Woods Foundation. Thank you all for joining us today at the iconic Riviera Country Club and a special thanks to the membership here at Riviera as well as Megan Watanabe, Dawn Emory, and the entire team for their hospitality not only today but throughout the year. As many are aware, we are coming off a banner year with the Tiger Woods Foundation celebrating our 20th anniversary in 2016. One of the many highlights was TGR Live being named as the event manager for this historic tournament and we couldn't be prouder to help usher in the next era of tournament golf here at Riviera along with our new title sponsor, Genesis. The Genesis Open benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation, which is headquartered in southern California. We are excited to deepen our impact in the local community through this tournament and advance our mission of championing break-through transformations for underserved youth through education. I'd like to acknowledge a few special guests representing the Tiger Woods Foundation here with us today. President and CEO Rick Singer and three Los Angeles-based Earl Woods Scholars, Kevin Nguyen, Anita Chheang and Alicia Frausto. Thank you for joining us and making us proud. Also making us proud is our volunteer core of over 1,000 dedicated individuals who devote their time and energy to the success of this tournament, some of whom have been volunteering their time for days. -
BRIEFS Competition in Columbus Brings out the Best in Supers
FRIENDLY FIRE Muirfield Village Golf Club Type: Private BRIEFS Rated by Golf Magazine: 1 9th U.S.; 32nd world Rated by Golf Digest: 16th in the nation Maintenance staff: 9 full-time; 16 seasonal Competition in Columbus No. of Holes: 18 Members: 200 local; 200 national Rounds per year: 20,000 brings out the best in supers Green fee: $ 1 25 Stimpmeter readings: Not applied Height of cut in inches: greens 1/8; tees 1/4; fairways 7/16 Super Mike McBride No. of tee markers: 3 No. of sand bunkers: 70 Architects: J. Nicklaus Metal spikes: Banned & Desmond Muirhead The Golf Club Type: Private Rated by Golf Magazine: 20th U.S.; 34th world Rated by Golf Digest: 28th in the nation Maintenance staff: 7 full-time; 17 seasonal No. of Holes: 18 NEW ENGLANDERS UNITE Members: 150 (+75 non-residents) The New Hampshire Golf Course Rounds per year: under 10,000 Superintendents Association, the Uni- Green fee: $40 Stimpmeter readings: 9.4 versity of New Hampshire Coopera- Height of cut: 9/64-5/32 greens; 3/8 tees; 7/16 fairways tive Extension and the Golf Course Super Keith Kresina Superintendents Association of New No. of tee markers: 4 No. of sand bunkers: 52 for members England have decided to join forces in Metal spikes: Mandatory Architect: Pete Dye hosting the Massachusetts Turfgrass Conference and Trade Show. This new Scioto Country Club conference will be held in January, in Type: Private The 11th hole at Ohio State University's nationally ranked Scarlet Course. Rated by Golf Magazine: 29th U.S.; 48th Boston, Mass., and will combine the in world New Hampshire Turf Conference and Rated by Golf Digest: 36 in nation 6:15 a.m.: At Ohio State Maintenance staff: 6 full-time; 25-30 seasonal the University of Massachusetts Turf No.