Port Royal Close Delayed
The anticipated closure of Port Royal for a multi-million dollar revamp is
set to become reality - but not for at least another year.

The Port Royal Trustees intend to close the course
for up to nine months, starting in the early part of 2008 when comprehensive
work to the greens, bunkers and faulty irrigation system will be carried out.
Chairman of the Trustees Wendell Brown - who took over in April with a firm
mandate to upgrade the Island's premier public course - said yesterday the
initial plan had been to close the facility either at the end of this year
or in the early part of 2007. But with all newly-laid greens requiring a large
amount of water in the early stages of their development, the decision was
taken to delay the closure for at least 12 months to accommodate the installation
of a new reverse osmosis plant and for improvements to be made to the $1 million
irrigation system - a system which has given the course management constant
headaches since its installation in 2000.
Brown added that in light of the
severe delays experienced during the recently-completed renovations at St.
George's Golf Club, the Trustees were determined to avoid a repeat and would
do so by being thorough and taking their time during the planning stage.
The length of the course is also set to be increased from around 6,500 yards to
over 6,700 from the championship tees. The planned increase in the production
of water at Port Royal will also require extra storage space - necessitating
the construction of extra water features to both hold the water and make the
course more challenging. "Given the nature and the scale of the changes we
are intending to make, there is not enough water up there at the moment for
us to do what we need to do," Brown said. "In light of that, we have decided
not to close to course until the water situation has been dealt with and we
intend to install a new reverse osmosis plant there during 2007. Once we have
a sufficient amount of water, we will be in a position to proceed with the
programme.
"What we are planning is significant and it makes sense to take
plenty of time over the planning stage so when it comes to making the changes,
everything runs smoothly. "The Department of Tourism has been selling Bermuda
as a golf and spa destination for some time now, and if we are going to remain
competitive with the courses on the eastern seaboard it is imperative that
we do everything we can to improve our product."
"Some of the private courses
such as Tucker's Point and Belmont Hills have spent a lot of money upgrading
themselves and it is our responsibility to follow their lead." A 2003 golf
course report written by Government tourism consultant Roddy Carr argued that
Bermuda would fall behind in the cut-throat world of golf tourism if it did
not spruce up all local courses, with Port Royal in particular deemed by Carr
to be in need of an "urgent upgrade." Designed by renowned golf course architect
Robert Trent Jones, at various times since it first opened in the early 1970s
Port Royal has been regarded as one of, if not the best public course in the
world. Over the past ten years or so, however, the course has become a shadow
of its former self - despite continuing to play host to major local events
such as the Bermuda Open and the Amateur Strokeplay Championships.
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