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Golf Course Architect Striving For Perfection
Golfen im Club, March 1998
Tony Ristola is a golf course designer whose method is quite unique...he
will only work on one golf course project at a time. In Germany he has
designed Artland Golf Club and the ten hole extension for G.C. Emstal.
A former tournament and teaching professional, he learned the design/construction
trade by building courses for Jack Nicklaus, Dye Designs and Kosti Kuronen
in the United States, Mexico, and Finland.
What is your opinion of golf courses in Germany?
There are good and bad projects in every country. The more time a truly
qualified golf course architect spends on the project during construction,
the better the result. It's that simple. Unfortunately many projects either
have had unqualified designers, or designers who were too busy with too
many projects too attend to the details. It's the same story everywhere.
If lack of attention makes poor courses, what
makes a superior golf course?
The best golf courses start with an exceptional piece of property. The
designer must then explore its dramatic points and create as much variety
as possible. The greens must be perfect in every way and the bunkers must
have a personality all their own. But without creating solid shot values,
interesting holes and playability for all levels of players, the golf course
will never be considered great. Look at all the truly great golf courses
and they all have a very strong sense of individuality. They follow no
standard for greatness because there isn't one. All the great courses are
distinct. They are bold. They beautify the landscape and nine of the top
ten were built on sand. This bodes well for opportunities in north Germany.
Why do you believe North Germany is the best
hope for great golf courses?
It's the sand. A significant part of this region has a soil or subsoil
which has a high sand content. This allows for very intricate work. It's
especially beneficial around the greens. Sandy soils drain superbly and
are inexpensive to work, therefore modest budgets go a long way. If you
don't create a great golf course, you can definately create something first
class. Sandy soil is the dream
material for an architect with a vivid imagination.
Which of course we assume you have?
I think Artland Golf Club and the ten hole extension for Golf Club Emstal
(Lingen) speak for themselves. I would stack them against anyone´s
body of work. Nicklaus, Dye, the big boys. Don't take my word for it though,
please go judge for yourself. They didn´t cost an arm and a leg to
build and they won't be expensive to maintain, even though it may look
like it. They are interesting, beautiful, maintainable and most importantly
playable for all classes of golfers, from beginner to professional. Artland,
for example, is maintained by a staff of three people. The superintendent
Joseph Offers, has done an amazing job with with such a limited staff.
Three people for 18 holes is unheard of in North America.
How is it possible to be significantly cheaper
in the design game?
First, my design fee isn't $1 million... Yet (smiles). Actually, I'm
very affordable. Second, I'm there everyday and can make all the necessary
alterations during the construction process. Moving material twice or three
times costs money. Also, I don't have to work with a golf course construction
company. This also saves money. For most of Artland and all of G.C. Emstal
the shaping work was completed by guys fresh from road construction. You
would never know it though. The key was being there to provide direction
and to communicate, communicate, communicate. We communicated on a daily
basis. Being there on a daily basis is the design/construction industry's
answer to the goal of better, faster, cheaper. The goal which every industry
strives to accomplish.
How many projects will you be able to handle
at one time?
One. Having a mass of projects where I would be ‘visiting' them occasionally
has no appeal to me. I want each of my projects to have my own personal
signature. I want to control quality, not quantity. Excellence is the goal.
Why is being there so important?
If we take the top 100 courses in the world, according to a U.S. golf
publication, 75 of the 100 were built before 1935. This was a period when
horse, mule and man were the construction power. The construction process
was damn slow. This gave the architect a lot of time to think about the
design and make the necessary changes in the design details while the work
was in process. Today the construction process is amazingly fast. What
took weeks at the turn of the century now only takes a fraction of the
time. There is another problem. The machines we use tend to make everything
look the same from one course to the next. So even if we can turn flat
land into rolling land easily, it is difficult to create individuality.
That is why being there is so important. To take advantage of every opportunity
and create individuality.
You talk a lot about details. What details?
You can take everything, and I mean everything and fine tune it. Adjust
it. Make it as good as possible. You name it and you can improve on it.
This is true in every industry from automobiles to computers. In golf it's
strategy, bunker forms, bunker positions, tee positions, foot paths, fairway
contours, greens contours, contours around the greens, balancing the design
etc. There is so much to consider. The paper plans are like a paint by
number kit. You can have a course built that way, but don't expect anything
special. A true work of art, something first class must have time spent
on it by the artist. The guys sitting in the machines doing the construction
work don't know golf and certainly can't read the mind of an architect
from looking at a piece of paper. That's my job. Communicating the design
intent. They get reliable information directly from the mouth of the horse.
There is a name for this design style, it's called "Leadership Driven Architecture".
How about the environmental restrictions. How
do they affect your design?
It is one of the first things I want to find out about a site. Where
the environmentally sensitive areas and other areas which could cause design
problems are. These areas strongly influence the design. In Lingen we worked
with the city biologist, BUND and the water control office for the Ems
River. During construction we met every week or every other week. We can
all laugh now but there were some very tense moments during the early weeks
of construction, especially with the biologist and BUND. The property was
this barren piece of farmland with some large groups of trees and modest
elevation changes, but the character of the property was destroyed from
years of farming. This was obvious because framing the farmland at both
ends were these incredibly beautiful old dune landscapes created by the
Ems. These dunes are a §28 natural reserve (naturschutzgebiet).
I walked these dune areas, and studied them during planning and during
construction. My goal was to bring that natural feel to the golf course.
The environmentalists feared we would leave the land as flat as a pancake.
Once we got the construction process rolling and they got a taste of some
completed work, they became great supporters. They saw the land being restored
to a version of its original beauty, a connection with the §28 properties.
As Mr. Alves from BUND often said later, `there has been a great misunderstanding.'
I know if you asked them they would all agree the course surpassed their
wildest hopes. |