The 103-year-old course in Richmond, Va., which retains remnants of the original design by A. W. Tillinghast, will now be managed by The First Tee of Richmond and converted into a six-hole short course and 12-hole course, through a $4 million renovation by Love Golf Design that will be funded by $3.25 million in privately raised capital and $750,000 from Henrico County (Va.), which owns the property.
The century-old Belmont Golf Course in Richmond, Va. soon will be transformed as part of an ambitious $4 million plan led by The First Tee of Greater Richmond, Richmond BizSense reported.
On December 10, Richmond BizSense reported, the nonprofit organization was awarded the contract to take over management of the course, which is owned by Henrico County (Va.), after pitching a plan to modernize Belmont by converting its current 18 holes into a six-hole short course and a 12-hole course that would rely on many of the bones of its original design from 1916, as well as adding a driving range and practice areas.
“We’re dealing with a unique piece of property,” said Brent Schneider, CEO of The First Tee of Richmond. “Our vision is to create a new Belmont that will be an affordable, inclusive public golf facility that’s open to all [and] where the history of American golf meets the future of American golf.”
First Tee, which already operates an 18-hole course in Chesterfield, Va. and a six-hole course in the city of Richmond, would pay for the upgrades using at least $3.25 million in privately raised capital already pledged by its donors, plus $750,000 set aside by Henrico County, Richmond BizSense reported.
The plan was approved by the county Board of Supervisors after First Tee’s bid was selected by the county Department of Recreation and Parks as the top respondent to a Request for Proposal (RFP) issued in August, Richmond BizSense reported. First Tee was one of five organizations that made a pitch for the contract.
The contract awards First Tee a lease to operate Belmont for at least 20 years, Richmond BizSense reported. It would take the keys to the course on January 1, and immediately close it for play to begin renovations. Schneider said the group expects work to be completed by spring 2021.
The deal ends the uncertainty of Belmont’s future, which had been up in the air in the face of consecutive years of financial losses and the county declaring it wanted to be out of the business of running a golf course, Richmond BizSense reported. First Tee’s plans would look to satisfy both the county’s desires and the nonprofit’s goal of getting golf in front of more of the region’s youth. It also will likely please golf enthusiasts, some of whom have publicly sought to preserve Belmont’s heritage, including the remnants of its original course designer, famed architect A.W. Tillinghast, and its status as the only course in Virginia to ever host a major PGA tournament (the 1949 PGA Championship won by Sam Snead0.
Neal Luther, Henrico County’s Director of Recreation and Parks, said Belmont’s bid stood out above the rest for going beyond just what was asked for in the RFP, Richmond BizSense reported.
“First Tee is basically saying we’ll come in right now with $3.2 million in privately raised capital up front, leveraged with our $750,000. No operator could touch that,” Luther said. “No other private entity could make economic sense out of putting $4 million into that course up front.”
The county’s goals included maintaining Belmont as a golf course, making it less of a liability to taxpayers and serving a broader spectrum of the local golf market, Richmond BizSense reported. A requirement in the RFP was for a new operator to come to the table with a plan to boost youth golf participation at Belmont. No other respondent came close to First Tee on that front, Luther said.
“Belmont is doing less than 300 youth rounds on an annual basis. That’s terrible,” he said. “A private operator, in our opinion, wasn’t going to come in and change that much.”
While the RFP didn’t envision closing the course through 2021, Luther urged patience from the community, Richmond BizSense reported. “The key is people are going to have to be patient because First Tee is coming forward with a complete renovation,” he said.
Schneider said First Tee has been watching patiently the last two years as the county plotted the best route for Belmont’s future, before deciding on an RFP, Richmond BizSense reported. That process played out while attention was paid to Belmont’s ties to Tillinghast.
“We were kind of watching from the outside,” Schneider said. “We, like all golf enthusiasts, understand the importance and history of Belmont and really respect it.”
First Tee serves over 70,000 children in the Richmond region, providing programs, lesson plans and equipment through elementary school PE classes, Richmond BizSense reported. Schneider said Belmont will complement the group’s other two facilities, and that all led to the nonprofit making a run at the RFP.
“We’re in over 40 schools in Henrico County. It’s an awesome facility. We said, ‘Heck, let’s throw our name in the hat and see what happens,’” Schneider said.
In devising its pitch to make Belmont successful in the future, Richmond BizSense reported, Schneider said First Tee looked to current examples of courses that are experimenting in alternatives to the traditional 18-hole course, in the face of changing tastes in golf toward faster rounds. Those include the nine-hole reversible Bobby Jones Golf Course in Atlanta, and the nine-hole Sweetens Cove Golf Club in Tennessee.
Twelve-hole courses are also a trend, Schneider noted. “We feel like this is the future of the game,” Schneider said.
The changes to Belmont will be designed by Love Golf Design, run by former PGA pro Davis Love III, Richmond BizSense reported. The firm’s Scot Sherman will handle the design. His work includes Birdwood Golf Course in Charlottesville, Va. and the Olde Farm Golf Club in Bristol, Va.
“It will be a 12-hole championship course that, in our view, will be spectacular,” Schneider said. “This is going to be a big-time golf course. Though only being 12 holes, in our opinion it could be some of the best holes around.”
Schneider said his organization was not yet ready to unveil more specific design elements, other than to say Belmont’s holes will be updated with modern play in mind, while appreciating the elements of the course Tillinghast envisioned.
Other pieces of the plan, Richmond BizSense reported, could include walking paths for neighboring residents to access and upgrades to Belmont’s clubhouse, to accommodate retail operations and space for First Tee’s youth activities.
The money for the renovations is already committed, with at least $3.25 million pledged from donors, Schneider said, without naming any of the benefactors. “We have a group of very interested donors,” he said.
That’s on top of funds set aside by the county, $500,000 of which already had been earmarked to pay for necessary bunker improvements. Another $250,000 from the county will come in two years, according to the terms of the RFP, which also calls for the county to forego any lease payments or revenue share from the new operator, Richmond BizSense reported.
The lease includes operations and maintenance of Belmont’s 18-hole course, practice putting area, pro shop, snack bar and meeting space, Richmond BizSense reported. It does not include the neighboring county-owned tennis courts, rec center and surrounding parking lots, which Henrico Country would continue to operate and maintain. The county will retain ownership of the overall 125-acre property.
First Tee would be required to contribute annually a minimum of 5 percent of Belmont’s gross operating revenue equal to or above $1 million into a capital reserve escrow account, Richmond BizSense reported. That account would be set aside for capital improvements and major repairs over time.
First Tee’s nonprofit status allows it to focus less on turning a profit, Schneider said, with He only 30 to 35% of First Tee’s total annual revenue coming from running its golf courses day-to-day. The rest comes from special events and private support. “We don’t expect that model to change” with the Belmont arrangement, he said.
But he does expect Belmont to be a viable operation going forward, Richmond BizSense reported. “We’re not doing it for profit, but we do anticipate our first steady year would be profitable, but certainly not at the level that would be worth the investment we’re making,” Schneider said.
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