| Image via Wikipedia |
Commissioned to make sport and the environment sit comfortably alongside each other among some of the most impressive dunes in the Sahara Desert, designers Fadi Massoud and Matthew Spremulli have submitted proposals that include a golf course whose fairway texture and outline will change with virtually each cycle of seasonal rain and calculated flooding from a dammed lake.
The location - "a site of intense parody," they call it - is in Morocco:
"An existing small dam in the area holds water in an artificial lake within a natural depression. Leaks in the structure and the confluence of a seasonal river allowed for accidental flourishing wetlands to occur. The design premise for the project is to capitalize on these `mistakes` by allowing new structures and programs to augment ecologies and advance site processes. By allowing terracing and certain openings within the dam itself, new spaces for occupation and circulation emerge."The course will help stop dune advancement by creating a wetland system. While it seems to be intended that the tees and greens remain where they are, seasonal rains and the ephemeral nature of the river will cause the fairways to "evolve". How much "evolution" a feasible golf course can handle, mind you, is the million dollar question. I'm thinking superintendents probably have nightmares about courses like this.
"I've heard it's a bit like TPC Scottsdale."
"Nah, that was last week. This week it's more La Quinta..."
A graphical illustration of the proposals can be found here.
...........................................................................
Pic of the Day - can ayone identify this beauty?
0 comments:
Post a Comment