LATEST
NEWS

Richard Humphreys
/ Categories: News

Baltusrol’s Lower course to reopen in May following Gil Hanse restoration

The Lower course at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, New Jersey, will reopen in May following a restoration by Gil Hanse. 

The famous ‘dual courses’ at Baltusrol designed by AW Tillinghast opened in 1922 and since then the Lower course has hosted four US Opens, two PGA Championships, three US Amateurs and a US Women’s Open. Following Hanse’s restoration, the course will host the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship in 2023 and its third PGA Championship 2029. The Upper course will undergo a restoration in 2024. 

Both courses have undergone multiple renovations over the years so, with the appointment of Hanse in 2018 for a long-range master plan, the club sought a return of Tillinghast’s style to both courses. 

Hanse’s restoration of the Lower has focused on widening and twisting fairways, tree removal and returning greens to their original scale and size. Fairway bunkers that had been removed over the years have been reinstated, while others were eliminated to restore the ground game.  

According to Hanse, the biggest change has been the lowering of the course’s features, which has made greens the high point, and focus, of the holes. 

“Over the years, bunkers and green surrounds were raised for framing,” said Hanse. “And it was our belief that the golf course would present itself more authentically if we removed these raised features. Now the course better fits the ground and our perception of how Tillinghast presented it.” 

Hanse says some of the most dramatic changes were made to the fourth, seventeenth and eighteenth holes. 

“The short grass that used to join the third green to the fourth tee was restored,” said Hanse. “The fourth green was significantly expanded to the right after old photographs showed the horizon line behind the green was dramatically different. So, we dropped the right side of the green to create a lower section.” 

At the seventeenth, the ‘Sahara’ bunker complex was moved 40 yards down the fairway so that it is more in play for the bigger hitters while allowing shorter hitters to lay up. A narrow opening to the green has also been restored.  

“The entire eighteenth fairway was raised, bringing it level with the pond so it feels more natural as it goes downhill. Bunkers were removed both along the right side of the fairway and in front of the green. And the fairway was merged with the eighteenth fairway from the Upper course, back to what Tillinghast had designed.” 

The restoration also included infrastructure work such as installing new drainage, an irrigation system and a PrecisionAire subsurface air system for the greens. “Updating the infrastructure of the Lower will have a material impact on its agronomic health and our maintenance procedures for years to come,” said Matt Wirths, president of Baltusrol. “We feel like we have more control over the course’s health and playability going forward.”  

New tees have also been added, providing golfers with more options, and several practice areas have been renovated. 

Work on the Upper course will begin in 2024 with a reopening scheduled for 2025. “The Upper course has always remained much closer than the Lower to what Tillinghast originally designed,” said Hanse. “There’s still significant work to do to get the style back, but architecturally it’s a lot closer.” 

Previous Article New course to open at Barnbougle Dunes this month
Next Article Lohmann Quitno to begin Abbey Springs renovation in August
Print
8414 Rate this article:
No rating
Slideshow HTML
  • Baltusrol
    Evan Schiller

    The Lower course at Baltusrol Golf Club will reopen in May following a restoration by Gil Hanse

  • Baltusrol
    Evan Schiller

    The ‘Sahara’ bunker complex on the seventeenth was moved 40 yards down the fairway so that it is more in play for the bigger hitters

  • Baltusrol
    Evan Schiller

    “The entire eighteenth fairway was raised, bringing it level with the pond,” says Hanse

  • Baltusrol
    Evan Schiller

    Short grass that joined the third green to the fourth tee has been restored

  • Baltusrol
    Evan Schiller

    Hanse expanded the fourth green to the right, close to how Tillinghast designed it

ADd Image Credit here for home page
Evan Schiller
Richard Humphreys

Richard HumphreysRichard Humphreys

Other posts by Richard Humphreys
Contact author

Contact author

x
Winter 2024 issue of ASGCA’s By Design magazine is out now
Magazine, News | Wed 11 Dec, 2024

Winter 2024 issue of ASGCA’s By Design magazine is out now

Golf course architects take on the challenge of redesigning the Road hole at St Andrews

The October 2024 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!
Magazine, News | Thu 17 Oct, 2024

The October 2024 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!

The Keep at McLemore, a Bill Bergin-Rees Jones mountaintop design in northwest Georgia, features on the cover

FEATURE
ARTICLES

Taking time to recapture character
Inwood Country Club
Opinion | Daniel Friedman

Taking time to recapture character

Inwood’s Daniel Friedman talks about how the New York club has spent the last 20 years trying to make up for the previous 80 years of change that had slowly eroded the character of its Herbert Strong-designed course

A masterpiece comes into view
Cobbs Creek
Opinion | Mark Wagner

A masterpiece comes into view

Mark Wagner provides an update on progress of the revival of Cobbs Creek

Bill Amick: Long calling for short
ASGCA
Interview | Adam Lawrence

Bill Amick: Long calling for short

Adam Lawrence spoke to the designer about his life and his attempts to encourage golfers to play shorter courses

The triumph of the Dyeciples
ASGCA
Feature | Adam Lawrence

The triumph of the Dyeciples

Adam Lawrence asks why architects who trained with Pete Dye are so dominant in today’s golf design business

The Keep: On top of the world
Evan Schiller
On site | Richard Humphreys

The Keep: On top of the world

Richard Humphreys reports on a new layout that is destined to catch the eye. Designed by Bill Bergin and Rees Jones, McLemore’s second course occupies a spectacular setting on a mountaintop plateau

Goodwood: Down in the woods
Report | Richard Humphreys

Goodwood: Down in the woods

Golf At Goodwood has a new practice facility designed by James Edwards and built by MJ Abbott

Cedar Rapids: Blown away
Vaughn Halyard
On site | Adam Lawrence

Cedar Rapids: Blown away

After an acclaimed 2015 restoration by Ron Prichard, Iowa club thought it was set fair for the future. But Mother Nature had other ideas, says Adam Lawrence

North Ranch: Time for transformation
North Ranch CC
Report | Richard Humphreys

North Ranch: Time for transformation

Fifty years after it was originally laid out, the Ted Robinson layout has been re-envisioned by Jackson-Kahn Design and rebuilt by Landscapes Unlimited

Team building
Turfgrass
Interview | Richard Humphreys

Team building

Turfgrass has launched its US arm with the appointment of John Lawrence, Adam Moeller and Brad Owen. Richard Humphreys speaks with them, Turfgrass founder John Clarkin and director of agronomy Julian Mooney to find out more

Birdie Act: An end to templates?
Kevin Murray
Feature | Adam Lawrence

Birdie Act: An end to templates?

Legislation before the US Congress would extend the copyright protection that currently exists for buildings architecture to golf course design. But would that preclude the construction of classic hole designs, asks Adam Lawrence?

The art of project management
Leeds Golf Design
Opinion | Giulia Ferroni

The art of project management

Giulia Ferroni of Leeds Golf Design spells out the intricacies of executing a masterplan and the skills required from a golf course architect

Gopher Watch Competition – October 2024
Gopher Watch, News | Mon 21 Oct, 2024

Gopher Watch Competition – October 2024

Which course has Sandy the gopher visited this month?

MOST
POPULAR

FEATURED
BUSINESSES