LATEST
NEWS

Adam Lawrence
/ Categories: News

McIntosh spearheads five year improvement scheme at Strandhill

Strandhill Golf Club in County Sligo in the northwest of Ireland has embarked on an ambitious programme of improvement works. The scheme, which could take up to five years to implement, is being led by Dublin-based Scottish architect Ally McIntosh.

McIntosh and Strandhill’s greens crew, led by course manager Jason Kelly, have handled construction works for the first phase of improvements in house. This phase has involved rebunkering several holes, and making a number of other adjustments. 

At the first hole, for example, McIntosh has removed four greenside bunkers that blocked off the possibility of hitting a running approach to the green, while adding a new, large bunker some 50 yards short of the putting surface. “We are inviting golfers to carry this bunker with room to let the ball feed in from the left,” said McIntosh. Above and to the left of the semi-punchbowl green, where two bunkers previously sat, the architect has created a complex of humps and hollows designed to catch any shot that is played too safely out to the high side.

Other new bunkers have been built on several other holes, including the eighth, tenth and eleventh and seventeenth. These bunkers have been constructed in a ‘hybrid’ style, with clean revetted edges where the bunker faces a playing surface, and chunked rough grass where the sand transitions into out of play areas. The effect is not unlike some of the bunkers created at Castle Stuart in Scotland.

When the rebunkering effort is complete, McIntosh says he expects the total number of bunkers on the course to be reduced from 63 to around 48. “But each one will have a definite purpose in the design and playability of the golf course,” he said.

Phase two of the project involves the construction of two new golf holes in the unused dunes beyond the current fourth green. The club is working closely with the relevant Irish authorities to gain permission for this work, a process that has been given a boost by a recent biodiversity study showing substantially more species in the areas maintained as golf course than on the natural dune, which is largely covered in marram grass. McIntosh also hope to reorder the holes to make Strandhill a more natural walk and eliminate awkward crossing points.

Previous Article New course to be built using Southwest Greens synthetic turf
Next Article Gopher Watch Competition - Spring 2016
Print
7728 Rate this article:
5.0
Slideshow HTML
  • strandhillfront_bunker_first

    The new front bunker on the first hole

  • Strandhillgreenwithsea

    The course features views of the Atlantic

  • Strandhillhollow_left_of_first

    The new complex of hollows to the left of the first green

  • Mobile Dune

    Strandhill's property includes this impressive mobile dune

  • Strandhillnewpar3fifth

    The site of the proposed new par three fifth hole

Adam Lawrence

Adam LawrenceAdam Lawrence

Other posts by Adam Lawrence
Contact author

Contact author

x
The January 2025 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!
Magazine, News | Fri 17 Jan, 2025

The January 2025 issue of Golf Course Architecture is out now!

Projects covered include Golf Club Föhr, Brautarholt, Cabot Citrus Farms, Somabay and more

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

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