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Keep resort glitz out of St Andrews
Golf Week, 1 May 1999
Anyone who doubts the sacred nature of golf at St. Andrews
need only stand at the first tee of the Old Course, awaiting word from the
starter to play away, please.
The combination of nervous excitement and awe at the
gravity of the moment shakes golfers of all nations to their core. Here have
stood Old Tom Morris, Joyce Wethered, Bobby Jones and Seve Ballesteros. Here,
too, have stood visitors from every social class and of every skill level, all
engaged in the same compelling task: Steering a ball around the hollows,
bunkers and massive putting surfaces on the games most compelling
ground.
Enter developers, interested in exploiting the brand name
of St. Andrews to promote their own products. Kingsbarns, a pure links course
six miles out of town and devoid of housing and conference facilities, already
is well into construction and will open next year. Its design and low-impact
infrastructure only a clubhouse building assure its fit within
the environment.
Other projects Kingask, Feddinch and Scooniehill
are of a very different order. Theyre much closer to town, and
they include various combinations of hotel space, conference rooms and real
estate.
The character of this medieval university town already is
under siege by golfers and visitors who crowd its limited roads and streets in
search of Scottish tradition and heritage. Evidence of unbridled development
already can be found in the form of the Old Course Hotel, an ungainly block of
concrete and glass that mars the landscape along the Old Courses Road
Hole (No. 17). In their currently proposed form, the Kingask, Feddinch and
Scooniehill projects dont fit much better.
The fate of St. Andrews has been entrusted to a handful of
regional development committees and local heritage societies. They must
carefully weigh both the economic and cultural impact of any new golf
development. Lets hope they do their job judiciously, with honor and
respect for the sacred nature of St. Andrews. The last thing the town needs is
to suffer the fate of so many American golf resort destinations whose ecology,
traditions and special feel were destroyed by unrestricted development.
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