William Buck Johns plans to upgrade the 18-hole golf course and transform the driving range into a trendy entertainment complex with food, cocktails and music. Johns has begun laying new synthetic turf and hanging new netting, and is in negotiations with the Jack Nicklaus Academy of Golf and Topgolf.
Operator William Buck Johns unveiled plans this week to upgrade the 18-hole course and morph the driving range into a trendy entertainment complex with food, cocktails and music at Newport Beach (Calif.) Golf Course, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Johns told the audience at Speak Up Newport’s monthly forum on May 11 that he’s in negotiations with the Jack Nicklaus Academy of Golf and Topgolf, to incorporate golf balls that contain computer microchips that track each shot’s accuracy and distance while awarding points for hitting targets, the Times reported.
“This is Newport Beach, after all,” Johns said. “We want to have the most sophisticated, enhanced golf course on the planet.”
Johns has already started making some changes at the public course, such as laying new synthetic turf, fixing the fountain and hanging new netting. However, he said, before he moves forward with more aggressive upgrades, he’s waiting to see whether the Orange County Board of Supervisors will grant him a 50-year lease extension for the course, the Times reported.
He said he expects to begin negotiating the extension with the county, which owns a portion of the 67-acre course, in the next several months, the Times reported.
For 40 years, the course has been operating south of John Wayne Airport in a space known as the “clear zone.” In the past several years, course revenue declined and expenses increased, resulting in a profit of just $80,000 in 2012 and a loss of $130,000 in 2013. Losses also were projected for 2014 and 2015, according to county documents. The numbers for those years have not been made available, the Times reported.
In 2015, the Board of Supervisors voted to give Johns the remaining five years of the golf course’s 10-year lease after the shareholders of NBGC LLC agreed to sell their interest in the course to his company, the Times reported.
According to Johns’ proposal, a 50-year lease extension would enable him to finance about $4.6 million in improvements over a longer period, making the effort economically viable. In February, Newport Beach city leaders agreed to send county officials a letter of support for the extended lease, the Times reported.
Along with an upgraded course, the extension would provide another benefit to Newport Beach, according to Johns and city officials. “The golf course is an important amenity for the region, as well as providing an important buffer against efforts that would expand existing runways at John Wayne Airport,” Newport Beach Mayor Diane Dixon wrote to the county. “It has always been important to our community that the airport remain within the same footprint that it exists today.”
In 2006, the city entered into an agreement with the county that, among other things, stated that if the county wanted to expand the airport’s runways into the golf course area, it would need the city’s permission, the Times reported.
About a year later, the county considered a proposal to rip out the back nine of the golf course to put in an overflow parking lot for the airport. The idea upset golfers and some Newport residents who opposed expansion of the airport’s footprint. The proposal was eventually taken off the table, the Times reported.
Johns said that an extended lease would ensure the space continues as a golf course for many years to come, the Times reported.
“We need to do what we can to contain [the airport],” Johns said.
Tell Us What You Think!
You must be logged in to post a comment.