Leewood Golf Club And Golf Course
Leewood Golf Club And Golf Course, When golf course architect Devereux Emmet organized plans for a brand new Eastchester golf course that was to open in 1922, the only “green” elements anyone concerned about was the 18 putting surfaces spotted throughout the 99-acre property acquired by D.W. Griffith and other founding members of the Leewood Golf Club. When the members decided to restore the leaky, inadequate irrigation system in 2011, they found a method to not only make the course better suited to the current game but to clean up the water that flows through it in the process.
As architect Dave Heatwole, who managed the course renovation, explains, “The golf course environmentally takes street drainage and runs it through some ponds until it's usable for irrigation.” Drainage from the course itself runs through exactly the same ponds, so once the sprinklers are running, they're spraying recycled water. He adds that, in the case of a flood threat, the pond levels may be lowered beforehand to deal with excess runoff from the neighborhood—another positive benefit.
The ponds were expanded from existing water hazards on the course through the two-year renovation at Leewood. Even the excavated earth from the pond expansion was recycled into fill for new tees, greens, and newly contoured fairways throughout the course. Fifteen of the 18 holes were renovated through the project.
The course is now longer and more logically routed, making play a great deal more exciting. As Heatwole says, “It's compact, but it makes a good golf experience.” Leewood is recognized as a family-oriented club where new memberships are initiation-free and priced to attract younger, more active families. It's also the house of “The Bambino,” an invitational tournament for local pros that commemorates the club's most famous member, Babe Ruth, who donated two of his Leewood golf trophies for display in the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Leewood Golf Club And Golf Course
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