Course Correction
Bloomberg Businessweek|April 12, 2021
A plan to renovate public links in the U.S. capital aims to bring golf back to the community
By Michael Croley
Course Correction

At the historic Langston Golf Course in Washington, D.C., the portable hand-washing stations are either broken or bone-dry. The asphalt cart paths, worn by time and use, are mostly chunks and dust. When I visited in February, a snow shovel lay beside the tee marker of the second hole for no apparent reason other than to clear, if you wished, what appeared to be an almost intentional ground cover of goose droppings over every brown blade of dormant Bermuda grass.

Yet for all this disrepair and neglect, dozens of golfers were walking the course that Saturday afternoon, letting out familiar groans over narrowly missed putts and cheers of joy from the simple pleasure of bending a small ball to one’s will and skill.

Their bright outfits and clattering clubs created a vibrant atmosphere that was a testament to the course’s overwhelming popularity: Between here and its sister properties, East Potomac Park and Rock Creek Park, Washington-area golfers average 120,000 rounds per year—a pace that matches the top resorts in the country, and at $25, is much less expensive.

But change is afoot. An all-star lineup of architects has signed on to pro bono renovate the city’s municipal courses. Gil Hanse, best known for his course at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, will turn Rock Creek Park into a 9-hole facility with a reimagined practice range. Tom Doak of Pacific Dunes fame, among others, will try to restore East Potomac Park’s original 18-hole reversible design.

This story is from the April 12, 2021 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.

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This story is from the April 12, 2021 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.

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