After playing Gil Hanse’s terrific restoration of Lake Merced Golf Club last week, there are a couple nuances to the project that I think warrant further discussion to better appreciate the scope of the work. For this project—in my mind—shares more similarities with its close neighbor Cal Club than, say, Gil’s work at Southern Hills or Oakland Hills South, and not just because of geographical proximity.
Like Cal, Lake Merced is a restoration of a version of the course that was not in itself the original design. Alister MacKenzie was hired by the club in 1928 to renovate the 1923 William Locke (or is it Lock? I’ve seen both spellings on GCA but LMGC uses the “e”) design that featured a significant number of penal bunkers. From what I understand, MacKenzie made little (or no?) changes to Locke’s routing, but modified all greens, added length, reduced the number of bunkers, and incorporated his patently beautiful and strategically placed bunker shaping.
The restoration could never be identical, however, because the Locke/MacKenzie layout was impacted in the early 1960s by the construction of I-280, and eminent domain resulted in a loss of acreage taking away three holes. Despite the additional constraints of a repositioned clubhouse and driving range, Gil nevertheless managed to recreate holes in approximately 16 of the 18 preexisting Locke/MacKenzie corridors that Robert Muir Graves had rerouted in 1962. Only one hole, the par 3 16th, is a true Hanse original, and though there are a few others that do not replicate directionally or exactly what MacKenzie had once redesigned in the ground, they all seamlessly embody the same spirit.
Like Cal, Lake Merced’s design appropriately feels like a well considered amalgamation. If today’s course doesn’t strike you as an archetypal Alister MacKenzie design in the way Pasatiempo or Meadow might, that’s because it shouldn’t—it was not his course, but he renovated it, like he did at Cal, into a layout that upholds the timeless tenets of strategic principles. Both clubs' complex design histories and acreage changes need not be detrimental to their legacies, for their challenges lent themselves to modern reinterpretations that have proven to be just as thrilling.
Bay Area parkland is a distinctive and beautiful environment for golf and Lake Merced’s tree removal has accentuated the land’s movement and vistas to its namesake lake and neighboring Olympic Club. I was surprised and impressed by how much width was recaptured on most holes on a site Tiger Woods once said was the most claustrophobic course he’d ever played. Though I always fail to really see green contours on an initial round, I noted lovely rises on 1, a wicked front on 6, and wild rolls on 9 green guarded by a bunker reminiscent of a lion’s mouth. There are a healthy dose of blind or semi-blind landing areas from tee shots, and approaches feature a number of bunkers exemplifying MacKenzie’s talent for creating forced perspective on the golfer—utilizing their shaping to appear closer or further from green pads than they really are. The cavemen did excellent work building bunkers that are characteristically MacKenzie in both aesthetic and function, but importantly none of them seem like reproductions from other courses—they seem suited only to Lake Merced, and rightfully so.
On a different thread, Al Jamieson suggested that LMGC will be a new candidate for Top 100 lists, and I think “candidate” is the appropriate word instead of assumed entrant. From my point of view, the most crowded Doak Score echelon of renowned courses is a 7, and US Top 100 lists feature more 7’s than any other score, which inevitably also leaves out many other worthy 7’s. Lake Merced for me has risen from a 5 to a 7, which is an exceptional enhancement, and there still remains upside potential after further growing in and getting conditions as fiery as possible. A couple key walking bridges could mitigate some transitions, and a blind aiming pole behind 11 green for the tee shot could also bolster the personality of the playing experience. The membership should be proud for entrusting their course in Gil’s hands, though I think Gil’s decision to take on the project was far riskier on his end than the club’s. In an already crowded metropolitan market with multiple Top 100 entrants, Hanse was willing to put his name behind a club that previously was not considered in the same breath as Cal, SFGC, or Olympic’s Lake. After his breathtaking work, the city’s three-ball has finally found its fourth, and determining who gives strokes to whom is up for debate!

3

5

6

8 approach

From 10 green; 6 & 7

12 tee

12 approach

12 green

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18 green from 14 green

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18 approach