A new golf course designed by Scottish golf architect Stuart Rennie has now opened for play at the newly-named Kings Golf Club in Inverness, Scotland.
The course replaces the layout at the former Torvean Golf Club that will be lost to the construction of the new Inverness West Link road, with the new course occupying land to the north-west of the old one.
Torvean opened as a nine-hole course in 1962 and was extended to eighteen in 1988. It was run by the council before becoming a member-owned club, with the land remaining in council ownership and leased back to the club.
When the proposed West Link was routed straight through the golf course, Highland Council was obligated to provide a like-for-like golf facility.
“I was only 32 when I was appointed to design the course, very young to win such a job, and, let us be honest, there are not that many new golf course projects around at the moment,” said Rennie. “So obviously this has been a hugely important project for me, and I have put my heart and soul into it.”
Sixteen holes of the course occupy new land, while the first and eighteenth are on land that was previously home to three holes of the old course. A new clubhouse has also been built. “During construction, we had to ensure that there were always eighteen holes available for members to play, but we also had to have the new course open by 2019, so that phase two of the road construction can start,” said Rennie.
“The old course was pretty flat, but now we have a nice, undulating site. There is 65 metres of elevation change between the top and bottom of the site. The soil is quite nice – sandy and gravelly, although it had been arable farmland. We were able to build a very lay-of-the-land course – we moved less than 100,000 cubic metres of earth.
“I particularly like the fourth hole, though I have heard different opinions from some others. We tried to make use of existing drainage flows, with open ditches and wetlands, and on the fourth you play towards a ditch at 220 yards off the tee, with a bunker to the left. The green surface is blind, though you can see the top of the pin, and there are no bunkers at greenside, promoting a running approach.
“We tried very hard to make the par threes both special and individual – they all play in different directions and to different lengths. That’s something that is important to me – I think from growing up playing Royal Dornoch.”
Read our coverage of the project from November 2018, when construction was approaching completion.
Course manager Stevie McIntosh said: “There has been talk in Inverness for many years about the potential relocation of the Torvean course, so we are thrilled finally to see it come to fruition. We are only moving across the road, but we’re going to a self-contained high-quality new facility with clubhouse, maintenance facility and golf course. Stuart Rennie has created an inland gem in Inverness, which will rival most of the north of Scotland’s classic links. It was a privilege to work with Stuart from start to finish: his professional ability shone.”