http://www.cybergolf.com/region.asp?id=1280&placeID=3Doak Now Designing Colorado Course
Heralded architect, Tom Doak of Renaissance Golf Design, is now in the process of designing The Canyons, a new semiprivate golf club in Castle Rock, Colo. The project’s backer, Lee Alpert of the Alpert Company, hired Doak in February 2003 after playing one of the architect’s most heralded works, Pacific Dunes in Bandon, Ore.
“He’s a hands-on golf enthusiast,” Alpert told the Douglas County News-Press. “Before accepting the job, he met with us several times to make sure we’d do justice to his design. We played a round with him at Pacific Dunes in Oregon, which Golf Digest rated the No. 2 course in the nation. He really keeps with the contour of the land.”
In continuing his minimalist philosophy, Doak promises to minimize site grading at The Canyons to only several hundred thousand yards. “My favorite parts of the property are the sandy washes,” said Doak. “We’re going to incorporate them as natural hazards, like the ones they had in the 1920s. The course is going to have a rugged look to fit with the land. The golf greens will be 150-200 feet wide, instead of 300 feet wide, so water resources can be conserved.”
The golf course is part of an eponymous 3,500-acre development north of Crowfoot Valley Road in Castle Rock. The Alpert Co. is slated to ask the Parker Water and Sanitation District to annex the site. If that request is approved, the Alpert Company will give nonrenewable, underground water rights in the Denver Basin aquifers to Parker Water. The water district will build a reservoir, using mostly well water, north of The Canyons.
The project was approved in 2001, with a rezoning of the site approved in 2000 after several years of contentious public hearings for a previous project – called Happy Canyon – on the property. Alpert Company recently assumed the development rights after acquiring the acreage.
The large-scale project involves 1,500 homes on the north section of the site; these units will be platted after Doak designs the course. Another 1,000 homes on the southeast side of Crowfoot Valley Road have not been platted. The project also involves various recreational and commercial amenities. If all goes well, work on the golf course may begin this summer and be open for play in 2005.