Virginia Golfer September / October 2014 | Page 9

Alterations to Keswick Shows Pete Dye in Vintage Form Course reshaped and character enhanced by the world-renowned designer by DAVID GOULD Keswick is being reinvigorated with a toe-to-top renovation by Pete Dye. FILE PHOTOS (2) T he scribes of medieval Europe, who wrote mainly on parchment, would occasionally re-purpose a scroll by scraping off the old ink. This happened to a famous treatise on Roman politics by Cicero—seems parchment was needed to record St. Augustine’s commentary on the Psalms. A “palimpsest” is what historians call the new document, and in golf course construction there are cases of a similar switcheroo. One example would be Stonehaven, a Scottsdale, Ariz., course that was purchased in 2001 and bulldozed down to dirt level just weeks before its scheduled opening. New owners erased Greg Norman’s artistry so that Tom Fazio could create Mirabel Golf Club on the site. Another would be Medinah (Ill.) Country Club’s longtime “overflow” 18, the No. 1 course. As of this summer it’s a new design by Tom Doak, sculpted on the hole corridors of T Bendelow’s 1926 routing. om The award-winning Doak has many heroes among golf course designers, but no contemporary architect earns more of his praise than Pete Dye. And it’s the venerable Dye who last year scraped down the land features of a 6,306-yard golf w w w. v s g a . o r g course at The Keswick Club, outside Charlottesville, to create something new. The contours Dye eradicated were carved by Arnold Palmer in the 1990s, on a parcel that had originally contained a pair of Fred Findlay-built nines from 1948 and 1953. You could think of it as a double palimpsest. TRANSFORMATIVE EFFECT WITH NEW DESIGN Keswick is owned by the same group that hired Dye to build his iconic Ocean Course at Kiawah Island. The company owns Sea Pines Resort as well, where Dye’s Harbour T own Golf Links receives daily pilgrimages. He was an easy choice to re-imagine the Keswick golf amenity, on which members and hotel guests played about 10,000 annual rounds in recent years. As he was getting down to the final adjustments that characterize the growin stage, Dye took stock and called this latest creation “a pretty course with rolling hills and great views of the mountains. I think golfers are really going to enjoy it.” In a sign of true commitment to the project, ownership converted several golf-bordering homesites it could have sold for a pretty penny over to golf acreage, in the name of additional tee-to-green yardage. They even purchased lots that were in the hands of private owners, again to add land area. The finished Keswick layout that members and hotel guests will be playing this autumn boasts a back tee measurement of 7,136 yards. Extensive earth-moving and tree removal gave Dye open territory for the fascinating angles and lines he builds into each one of his courses. “The goal of everyone involved was to make this a fast and firm surface,” says Erik McGraw, Keswick’s PGA head golf professional and a 15-year veteran of the resort golf program. “Our fairway grass is called Latitude