Veteran course designer Chris Wilczynski, ASGCA, has formed his own practice, Ann Arbor-based C.W. Golf Architecture, and the firm’s inaugural project is underway at Wanakah Country Club just west of Buffalo, N.Y.
Wilczynski formed C.W. Golf Architecture early in 2010, after two productive, award-winning decades at Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates. Wilczynski was first associated with the firm in 1987 and was named a full partner in 2003. During his tenure there, as lead architect, he was responsible for a host of original designs and renovations that garnered national design plaudits:
“All of this work is my own, but it was done in collaboration with Arthur Hills and my colleagues at Hills/Forrest,” said Wilczynski, 40, a member of the American Society of Golf Course Architects since 2005. “I went to work for Arthur Hills when I was 17, still in high school, then full time following my graduation from Michigan State University. No one understands the tenets of classic design theory better than Arthur, and I learned those lessons well. But the time was right, this year, to take all that I’ve learned and put it into practice below my own signature. My work at Wanakah is just the beginning.”
Located in Hamburg, N.Y., on the shores of Lake Erie, Wanakah is one of the northeast’s oldest clubs. It was formed in 1899, and while Donald Ross is documented to have worked on-site in the 1930s, Wanakah’s design pedigree is not so straightforward. The layout Wilczynski first encountered represents the work of several designers, amateur and otherwise, all of whom put their stamps on the layout.
“The result is a design that had very little stylistic direction, no unified themes,” Wilczynski said. “The green surfaces are actually quite good, but the bunker complexes that frame and protect those greens, and the fairway landing areas, were all over the map. So that was a focus of the work we did this fall, and it will continue to be a focus as we move forward in 2011.”
Wilczynski had done a complete master plan for Wanakah back in 2005. It was shelved until 2009, when drainage issues course-wide forced the club’s hand. Chronically soggy fairways were the impetus for updating the master plan in 2009, and for starting construction in the fall of 2010.
“The club sensed that it had to do something,” said Wilczynski, who has executed a dozen comprehensive renovations from Florida (Forest Glen Golf & Country Club in Naples) to Colorado (Green Gables CC in Denver) to Arizona (Camelback Golf Resort, Padre Course, in Scottsdale). “This is a common series of events: A club identifies design goals over a period of years but it’s something practical and immediate, such as drainage issues or a poa annua infestation, that obliges the club to pull the trigger and implement the master plan.”
“The drainage issues at Wanakah were getting so bad that many sunny days, following rain events in the spring and fall, were routinely lost. We solved these issues on four holes this fall. We installed the drainage capability that’s been lacking for 100 years by manipulating the fairway contours to create positive flow leading to these new drainage basins. This required real nuance. Wanakah is a relatively flat golf course and the contour we created had to look proper and natural in that context.”
All the dirt exposed in 2010 was immediately sodded, so Wanakah will reopen these four renovated holes simultaneous with the other 14 come the spring of 2011. In the fall of 2011, C.W. Golf Architecture will tackle a new set of holes, along with bunker renovation and tee work.
The renovation of Wanakah Country Club is but one of several projects now on the docket for C.W. Golf Architecture. Among them:
“The Wanakah, Forest Akers and Stoneybrook projects are indicative of the work C.W. Golf Architecture is doing today. We’d all love to be designing new golf courses, but the market isn’t there right now and I really enjoy the renovation discipline: addressing practical issues like drainage and bunker maintenance that help clubs with their bottom lines, while providing unified design themes that make the course more strategic, more aesthetically pleasing and, most important, more fun to play.”
“During the past 15 years I have generated dozens of these master plans, for private clubs especially, and I’ve played a major role in getting them implemented. This is an art in and of itself: working with private clubs, boards, and membership groups. I understand the renovation process, but I also understand the approval and implementation processes. A master plan is just a document unless you can get the project sold to membership.”
[For more information on C.W. Golf Architecture, contact Chris Wilczynski via 734-395-7941/chris@cwgolfarch.com or visit www.cwgolfarch.com]
In recent years, the conversation around sustainability has become central to various industries, and golf…
Sometimes Heavy Duty or Industrial Duty is not enough. Sometimes the job calls for the…
Circling Raven Golf Club garnered the No. 14 ranking in Golfweek’s just published “Top 50…
Copperleaf Golf Club in Estero, Florida, recently celebrated the grand opening of its upscale and completely…
Foley Company is thrilled to announce the acquisition of SALSCO, Inc., an industry leader in…
Acclaimed golf course architecture practice King-Collins Golf Course Design has added a third partner, Canadian…