| Practical Golf Case Study: Cottonwood Creek Junior Golf Course |
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There are lots of wonderful things in Waco, and one of the best examples is Cottonwood Creek Junior Golf Course. This is a textbook example of how one person can make a difference and muster the support needed to get a golf facility built.
Jim Moore, a former golf course superintendent and now a USGA agronomist, decided that although Waco had a solid junior golf program, the community needed more. So Jim helped form a committee at the existing full-size, 18-hole Cottonwood Creek Golf Course to see if they could add a junior course to the facility. The committee got the City of Waco to commit 10 acres of vacant land near the clubhouse, convinced an ASGCA golf course architect to do a plan, and then set about getting whatever it took to get the plan built.
The total amount of money raised from grant and gifts was $90,000, and then they set their sights on getting folks to donate equipment, materials, or give deep discounts on purchases. For instance, the local John Deere Company loaned the project a small bulldozer, irrigation companies donated outdated but serviceable equipment, a local NationsRent gave a 50% discount, and the City of Waco loaned a rubber tired loader to the project. Jim, his three sons Travis, Andrew, and Patrick, ages 17, 15, and 10, respectively, plus three other laborers, did most of the physical work. They completed the project in five months, including the sodding, and the project opened Oct. 19, 2001. The course is designed so only one additional laborer is added to the existing maintenance staff at Cottonwood Creek, thus keeping the added maintenance cost down to about $35,000 per year.
Editor’s note: The above practical golf case study is an excerpt from “Building a Practical Golf Facility – A Step-by-Step Guide to Realizing a Dream” published by the American Society of Golf Course Architects in 2005 and written by Dr. Michael J. Hurdzan, ASGCA. |

Waco already had the fourth largest junior golf tournament in the nation, the