LTC 263-2005 Florida Golf Journal Features the Miami Beach Golf Club
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OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER
NO. LTC # 263~2005
LETTER TO COMMISSION
TO:
FROM:
Mayor David Dermer and Members of the City Commission
City Manager Jorge M. Gonzalez ~ t/"~
October 12,2005 U
Florida Golf Journal Features the . mi Beach Golf Club
DATE:
SUBJECT:
The fall edition of the Florida Golf Journal has become the latest golf magazine to promote
and recommend our beautiful Miami Beach Golf Club to its readers. Attached for your
reading pleasure is a copy of this magazine.
The Florida Golf Journal is published four times a year and enjoys a readership of over
50,000 per issue, The article, which begins on page 53, highlights the rich and very colorful
history of the golf course and Miami Beach from the time the golf course was opened by Carl
Fisher in 1923. Also included in the article are photographs from the past and present
depicting the beauty and grandeur of the course and some of the celebrity players who have
visited it.
The article is yet another example of national and international media focusing on the Miami
Beach Golf Club which brings the golf course and now the beautiful new clubhouse to the
attention of countless golfers who otherwise might not visit Miami Beach. Each media
exposure reflects the positive reception the Miami Beach Golf Club is enjoying from the golf
~hat contributes to its continued success.
C. Robert C. Middaugh, Assistant City Manager
Kevin Smith, Parks & Recreation Director
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Deep History and Cutting-Edge Design
Have Created a Golf Experience to Match the Lifestyle
Florida Golf Journal I 53
''It was in horrible condition," says Johnny LaPonzina,
president of Professional Course Management, the firm
hired to manage and operate Miami Beach Golf Club.
''It was a disgrace to the community. There were so
many rocks and weeds and so much dirt, it was almost
unplayable."
This municipal course was old and tired ." an eyesore.
Though Miami Beach Golf Club is just five blocks west
of the glitz and glamour along Collins Avenue and the
oceanfront, a short time ago the golf course wasn't worthy
of an association with anything chic.
"We have the ultimate 19th hole," Weber says. "You can walk
to South Beach from here."
That's part of the swanky aura along the American Riviera.
~
Weber can pick out any number of trendy targets along
the horizon.
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But here, at the fourth tee, the club's director of golf is
squaring his driver dead at the Setai, a 40-story glass tower
that shimmers like a diamond off the beach. It's a luxury
condo and boutique hotel with a five-star restaurant and bar.
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Towering in the distance, beyond the 12th fairway, there's
the Portofino Towers, a pink and powder blue testament to
the exotic charms of Miami Beach's Art Deco architectural
design. The high-rise condominium is home to some of the
city's most rich and famous residents.
In
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~South Beach, Randy Weber points out the eclectic
U targets players can use to navigate their way across
Miami Beach Golf Club.
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I door to play here," Weber says.
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· Actor Matt Damon plays when he's visiting. Former
NFL great and actor Jim Brown is a member. So is fel-
low Hall of Farner Lawrence Taylor, who not long
ago brought NBA legend Michael Jordan as his guest
on a 45-hole, one-day marathon.
Count former President Bill Clinton and former
Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino among the
guests, too.
"This golf course has a rich history," LaPonzina says.
"It was a very special and unique place. Co back to
the '50s and '60s, you had celebrities at the club. You
had notorious figures mixing with them, gamblers
and mafia figures. They weren't just playing here,
they were hanging out, playing cards and craps."
A $10 million renovation and re-design created today's engaging layout.
City officials in Miami Beach changed that three years ago with
the course's re-opening after a major renovation led by archi-
tects Arthur Hills and Steve Forrest.
Walk into the new clubhouse, and the past comes to
life on the walls flanking the entranceway and in hallways lead-
ing to the dining room and pro shop.
In a city that thrives on Botox injections and the skills of gifted
plastic surgeons, Miami Beach Coif Club enjoyed a radical $10
million facelift. At 82 years old, the club now sports a fresh, hip
and youthful look. Though it remains a municipal course, it has
been transformed into a high-end public facility making patrons
feel they're getting a country club experience.
There's a grainy black-and-white photo of Jackie Cleason
with Arnold Palmer. Cleason lived on Alton Road, across the
street from the clubhouse. Palmer made his professional debut
down the road at Miami Springs
Country Club. There also is a photo of
former President Warren Harding with
club in hand. And there's a shot that
makes you do a double take, a photo
of an unidentified man taking his
stance on the head of an elephant.
He appears to be addressing a golf
ball teed up on the end of the ele-
phant's trunk.
'This isn't your every day municipal
golf course," LaPonzina says. "You're
hitting Titleist golf balls on the driv-
ing range now. And, we've established
extremely high standards of service."
During the peak winter and spring sea-
son, the club's I8-hole rate is $185, with
Southeast Florida residents (Palm Beach
to the Keys) able to play for $100 and
Miami Beach residents for $80. The rates
fall substantially in the summer, $85 for 18
holes with Southeast Florida and local resi-
dents enjoying lower rates.
"We're not really sure what that
was about, but we think it might
have had something to do with
the Republican convention
being here," says Jackie
Ryden, the club's director of
marketing.
The new $4 million clubhouse opened in June.
With a stylish geometric design and canary yel-
low exterior, it fits right into South Beach's Art
Deco concepts.
What is known today as the
Miami Beach Coif Club
was actually opened as the
et ond jOc\(\e Bayshore Coif Course in
p-sno\d f'o\f{'\ 1923 by Carl Fisher, a pioneering
developer. Fisher built the Alton Road subdivision
in a bid to lure wealthy winter residents of New York
Indianapolis and Detroit to South Florida. He also built th~
original Miami Beach Coif Club, an 18-hole course adjacent to
Today, like the trendy nightclubs that surround
it, Miami Beach Coif Club is becoming a place
to be seen.
54 I Florida Golf Journal
Bayshore. That course was eventually plowed by developers,
paving the way for construction that now includes the Miami
Beach Convention Center.
I "At 82 years old, the club now sports I
a fresh, hip and youthful look.
Thoug h it remains a municiPal
course, it has been transformed into
a high-end public facility making
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With the city investing $6 million on the Bayshore course ren-
ovation, and another $4 million on the new clubhouse,
LaPonzina says he insisted on a name change.
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"We had to get rid of the name
Bayshore, and the image that went with
it," LaPonzina says. "People who identi-
fied this course with the old, worn-out
Bayshore would never want to play it.
This is a different course today, an
entirely new and different experience."
So the name Miami Beach Golf Club
was resurrected.
While Hills and Forrest mostly followed
the old Bayshore's routing, they created
a dramatically different look. The
course was completely bulldozed, the
lakes drained and expanded and re-
shaped.
Seashore Paspalum grass was another
factor in upgrading the course's look and
playability.
"I like the way the ball always sits up on
this grass," Weber says. "On the greens,
it's as close to bent grass as you can get
in the South."
Seashore Paspalum grass has a lush,
deep-green hue that marvelled
greenskeepers after turf specialists genet-
ically altered it for adaptability to golf.
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An environmentally friendly strain of grass, it can be nourished
with seawater or reclaimed water. In fact, seawater acts as a nat-
ural pesticide and herbicide and is a boon to water conservation.
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'The seawater kills any weed it touches,"
Weber says.
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There's water on 16 of
18 holes at the Miami Beach Golf Club,
and it comes into play on 14 of them. The lakes and ponds are
fed with seawater. Hills and Forrest created pockets of wetlands
Florida Golf Journal I 55
course
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throughout that also enhance the course's look.
With mangrove trees hugging some ponds, with canary palms,
golden bamboo and gumbo limbo trees throughout, there's no
mistaking you're in the tropics. Ibis, heron and other fowl fly in
and out of the wetland pockets.
The lakes teem with tarpon and snook.
"You can see them tailing all the time," Weber said. "If you were
in a flats boat in the Keys, you would be looking for that to cast
toward."
The course also is home to dozens of iguana, some of them as
large as four feet.
"We call this Iguanaville," Weber says, pointing to the trees
along the pond at the eighth tee box. 'There is a huge colony
of iguana living out here. This is my daughter's favorite spot."
The course is designed within 128 acres, but the strategic shap-
ing of ponds and discriminate use of trees make each hole appear
to stand alone despite the mostly open feel to the property.
"The location, right there near South Beach, is marvelous,"
says Forrest, the architect and business partner to
Hills. "But the property is flat. We were able to
create some movement using all the dirt
we dug out of the ponds. That
allowed us to raise the
greens and tees
and cut
bunkers
into
side
slopes
and
create
m 0 r e
attractive
vis u a I
images."
The course plays
from five sets of tees,
measuring 6813 yards
56 I Florida Golf Journal
Water plays on 14 of Miami Beach Golf Club's 18 holes.
from the back tees with a 73.1 rating and 131
slope.
You get an immediate feel of the experience
the design team intended at the first hole.
A dogleg-right par 5, you have some
room on your first tee shot, but the hole
toughens as it winds around a lake to a
small, elevated green.
'This course gets sneaky hard as
you move to the back side,"
Weber says.
The 17th is the signature
hole, a 183-yard par 3
over water to a sloping
green guarded by a
large horseshoe
bunker. At this tee
box, you get a
panoramic view
of the condos and
hotels sprouting on the
horizon along South Beach.
You'll also likely see some of those tailing
tarpon and sunbathing iguana.
'The city has built a golf club it can be proud of," LaPonzina
says. "I think it's a prototype of what more and more municipali-
ties want to do with their golf courses." .:.
Randall Mell is the golf writer at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and is
co-host oj the Nationwide Golf Exchange on The Sporting News
Radio Network at 7 a.nt. on Saturdays.