LATEST
NEWS

Richard Humphreys
/ Categories: News

Hawtree completes new short course for Adlington

Christine Fraser of Hawtree Limited has overseen the creation of a new nine-hole par-three course at Adlington Golf Centre in Cheshire, England.

The new course has been designed to replace the centre’s existing Graduate course, which will be lost when a new road construction project starts.

“Adlington Golf Centre was an exciting and equally challenging newbuild owing to the unique parameters set out in the design brief: to relocate the Graduate course while preserving the features of the original design,” said Fraser.

“The surface area, material, and construction method were limited to a near exact replica of the existing Graduate course. Herein lay the challenge of reproducing an existing design on a very dissimilar piece of land.”

Even though the new site is close to the existing layout, the character of the land is very different. “It is much bigger, more undulating; woven through woodland, dotted with ponds, ancient oaks, hedgerows, and habitat-rich marsh and meadowlands,” said Fraser. “Overall, much more interesting landforms than the original plot of agricultural land.

“Our plan was to take surface area measurements of the old and use these as guidelines for the new,” said Fraser. “An overall measurement of tees, fairways, and greens was to be redistributed throughout the new nine holes. The routing, shaping, and yardage distributions were all modified to best suit the new location.

“One visible difference between the courses is that there are no bunkers on the new Graduate course. This decision was made to reduce daily labour-intensive maintenance and long-term maintenance costs.

“Instead, players will contend with classic Hawtree contouring on many of the green surrounds – deep fall-offs, big broad movement and short-cut turf, providing equally as much interest and challenge to any green not hit in regulation.”

Hole yardages and the footprint of greens, tees and fairways are similar to the existing course, but the number of teeing areas on each hole has been reduced from three to two to avoid unnecessary turf maintenance.

“The additional acreage on the new site gives the feel of a much bigger, broader, commanding course,” said Fraser. “The space allows for the holes to feel individual, unique, and well separated from each other by way of woodlands, hedgerows, and natural topographic barriers.

“Similarities between the courses will be found in design intent, non-penal strategy, contouring and overall yardage. Complex putting surfaces combined with demanding tee shots create the challenging, yet extremely fun and exciting round of golf the Graduate course has become known for.

“Although we did have pre-set design parameters, the freedom of a newbuild is thrilling. I was able to spend a great amount of time on site both pre and during construction and getting to work directly with the client and contractor was what made this project special.”

MJ Abbott began construction in May 2018 and by October, it was ready for seeding – using J Rye Fairway and J Green mixtures from Johnsons Sports Seed.

“Works could have been completed earlier,” said Steve Briggs, contracts director at MJ Abbott. “The early weeks on site were blessed with great weather and production was fantastic. Part of the new layout, including two green and two tee complexes, was affected by overhead power lines. These were slow to be removed and by the time they were diverted in early September the weather had made a turn for the worst. Despite this minor hold up, the last areas to be seeded went into winter with a healthy grass cover and by summer 2019 showed no sign of being seeded later. The site is also split into two distinct soil types with a very sandy section and heavy clay. The terrain is rolling and natural with mature trees and the new holes sit into the landscape very well.”

“Both David Moss and MJ Abbott encouraged us to take risks, make mistakes, and design outside the box,” said Fraser. “Their support and encouragement were especially meaningful to me, as a young female designer.

“In my opinion, the most important and most impactful design work happens on-site during construction – where the plans are left in the office and the details are finessed directly with the shaper. They had the experience I lacked, and that is where I learned the most – out in the dirt and the rain, watching the course come to life.”

Previous Article The October 2019 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!
Next Article Nicklaus plans complete overhaul of Muirfield Village
Print
3414 Rate this article:
No rating
Slideshow HTML
  • Adlington

    Hawtree has designed a new nine-hole par-three course for Adlington Golf Centre

  • Adlington

    Architect Christine Fraser designed a layout with no bunkers, but deep fall-offs and big broad movement

  • Adlington

    The new course was built by MJ Abbott

Richard Humphreys

Richard HumphreysRichard Humphreys

Other posts by Richard Humphreys
Contact author

Contact author

x
Fall 2024 issue of ASGCA’s By Design magazine is out now
Magazine, News | Tue 10 Sep, 2024

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

Cover story focuses on how today’s architects have been inspired by the links courses of Britain and Ireland

The July 2024 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!
Magazine, News | Thu 18 Jul, 2024

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

The Kyle Phillips-designed Stonehill course near Bangkok, Thailand, features on the cover

FEATURE
ARTICLES

Brian Curley: Life of Brian
Brian Curley
Interview | Adam Lawrence

Brian Curley: Life of Brian

The designer has surely clocked up more air miles than anyone else in the business. Adam Lawrence caught up with him in between flights to discuss his career and his new venture with Jim Wagner

Spey Bay: Old and new
CDP
On site | Adam Lawrence

Spey Bay: Old and new

Scottish club is a very old-fashioned links with very modern ownership, an interesting mix, says Adam Lawrence

The Club at Golden Valley: Golden and modern
Peter Wong
Report | Richard Humphreys

The Club at Golden Valley: Golden and modern

Kevin Norby has completed a centennial project at Minnesota course, to modernise infrastructure and restore much of AW Tillinghast’s design philosophy

The Club at Quail Ridge: Turning up the contrast
Fry/Straka
Report | Richard Humphreys

The Club at Quail Ridge: Turning up the contrast

Fry/Straka and NMP Golf Construction embark on a huge rebuild of the North course, five years after the South was renovated

Minchinhampton GC: Striving for sustainability
Minchinhampton Golf Club
| Matthew Mears

Minchinhampton GC: Striving for sustainability

Matthew Mears discusses the benefits a ClearWater washpad recycling system has realised for the Cotswolds club

Native Links: A new era of native-owned courses
Cal Nez Designs
Good Read | Mark Wagner

Native Links: A new era of native-owned courses

Mark Wagner discusses the topic of his new book: the relationship and history between Native Americans and golf

Sahalee CC: Out of the woods
Patrick Oien
Report | Toby Ingleton

Sahalee CC: Out of the woods

The Seattle club has completed a programme of sensitive renovation work on its tree-lined course

Stonehill: A new level for Thai golf
Jason Michael Lang
On site | Richard Humphreys

Stonehill: A new level for Thai golf

Kyle Phillips has transformed some desolate mud land north of Thailand’s capital into one of the country’s best golf courses

Elevating the experience at Hunters Run
Hunters Run Country Club
Report | Richard Humphreys

Elevating the experience at Hunters Run

Kipp Schulties returned to the Florida club to oversee a near-$10 million project on the East course

Sedge Valley: A break from tradition
Brandon Carter
On site | Richard Humphreys

Sedge Valley: A break from tradition

Tom Doak’s newest creation at Sand Valley might convince American golfers that courses do not need to be long to be great

Peter Harradine: Golf’s great explorer
Harradine Golf
Interview | Adam Lawrence

Peter Harradine: Golf’s great explorer

The architect is part of golf design’s most enduring family business, and is one of the best-travelled men in the profession

Gopher Watch Competition – July 2024
Gopher Watch, News | Thu 18 Jul, 2024

Gopher Watch Competition – July 2024

Which course has Sandy the gopher visited this month?

MOST
POPULAR

FEATURED
BUSINESSES