GOLF
DESTINATIONS
Charlotte Golf:
Not your father's
Queen City
By Shane Sharp,
Contributing Writer
With destinations like Hilton Head, Myrtle Beach, and Pinehurst, the Carolinas seldom look at their metropolitan centers for as golf meccas. Once upon a time, this was justifiable. Even as recently as the late 1980s, the Charlotte and Raleigh/Durham metro areas were severely lacking in daily fee golf facilities.
But my how the times have changed. In Charlotte - the Carolinas’ largest city – a recent influx of high end, pay-for-play tracks have put the Queen City on the golfing map to stay.
Few cities have developed like Charlotte over the past decade. Once a sleepy southern city with a few small skyscrapers, the Charlotte metro area is now home to more than one million residents and is the second largest financial center in the U.S. Twenty-story buildings have given way to 40, and even 60-story towers. The downtown pulses with an energy that is the envy of many a mid-size city and an arts and music scene that would make many a larger city blush.
So what does all this mean for the game of golf in this bustling Piedmont burg? Charlotte has transformed from a private course oriented community to a city with enough quality public access golf to be considered a top golf business destination. The real draw of Charlotte golf, however, may be monetary - to play a top notch course in and around Mecklenburg County you'll pay about $35 on the weekdays and around $50 on weekends.
Where to Play
A slew of great courses have opened in Charlotte over the past ten years, so a complete treatment of each course is beyond the scope of the piece! But here is a sampling of where to find some topshelf, affordable golf in the land of the hornet.
Ballantyne
Resort Golf Club opened on Charlotte's prestigious
southeast side in 1998, and since it opened it's doors, it has
been one of the busiest courses in the city. Not to be confused
with the Ballantyne
Country Club, Ballantyne resort is open for daily play from
the public, and is well worth the time and effort.
Why is Ballantyne Resort, a course that was designed by a developer and not a golf course architect, so popular with locals? Many players enjoy the layout of the course, which happens to be on some of the more interesting land in the city. As is the case with most Piedmont cities, the land in and around Charlotte is fairly flat. But Ballantyne sports some great elevation changes and undulating greens, but remains player friendly with it's wide fairways.
Arnold Palmer is no stranger to the Charlotte area, and it seemed only a question of time before he put his stamp on daily fee golf in the Queen City. In 1996, Palmer and his right-hand man Ed Seay did just that with the opening of Birkdale.
Birkdale is a clever course, and they do not hesitate to charge for it - for a few years, the course was about the most expensive public track around. The idea behind Birkdale (and the price) was that the course could be your country club for a day; a place where you could be pampered and maybe even called by your first name if you played enough. Tired old marketing plan aside, the course is immaculately maintained, and the routing through Carolina woodlands (and unfortunately some homes and condos) is solid enough to garner much repeat play.
One of the great things about Charlotte is that you can drive twenty minutes from downtown (er, technically "Uptown" as it has been tagged) and be in unspoiled countryside. If you were to point yourself south-southeast from Uptown and drive for about thirty minutes out Providence Road towards the town of Monroe, you're sixth golfing sense will ultimately land you at Stonebridge Golf Club.
Stonebridge is all golf course and no frills. The clubhouse is somewhat small and bleak, the practice range is on the other side of the highway, and the cart garage has been known to flood after a summer shower. But the course is fantastic and pleasantly devoid of housing (although, that may change in the future.)
Stonebridge was designed by Richard Osborne, a former associate of the prolific Ron Garl. If you enjoy courses that offer two completely different sets of nines, then Stonebridge is for you. The front nine is routed through some stately Carolina hardwoods, and is old school parkland course at heart. The back nine is wide open, and while not quick a links-style course, it certainly comes close.
Just as Stonebridge is located in the countryside of southeast Charlotte, Verdict Ridge is located in the rural town of Denver, just thirty minutes northwest of the city. It seems that everyone is trying their hand at course design these days, and it is only fitting that the ex-mayor of Charlotte get involved.
Eddie Knox (said ex-mayor) designed Verdict Ridge, which opened it's doors in 1998, and there may be no better golf course in the Charlotte area. Verdict Ridge runs up and down hills, through forests, and can play havoc on the average player's game. If you are a golfer/naturalist, there is no better place to be in Charlotte in the fall, when the droves of trees that line the fairways at Verdict Ridge change colors.
Where to Stay
You could find a ubiquitous hotel on the outskirts of Charlotte, pay a little less, and have great access to one or two golf courses. But why not blow a few more bucks and hunker down in one of the most up and coming downtowns in the United States, within a half an hour's drive of dozens of great tracks?
The Dunhill Hotel is located right in the heart of "Uptown" on Tryon Street, and appeals to those who spurn the monotony of motels in favor of the ambiance of bed and breakfasts. The Hotel offers a number of business traveler-like services that rival the larger chains, and is in a five minute walk of a seemingly endless menu of great restaurants.
Feature Stories
- Piedmont region of the Tar Heel state has plenty to offer for golfers
- Calabash Golf Links said to be closing, making way for more development
- Skip crowded, pricy Pinehurst and salute nearby Fayetteville
- The 'other' Duke-North Carolina rivalry: On the links
- Pinehurst without No. 2's sticker shock? Believe it
- On the road with Shane Sharp: Charlotte to Asheville and the North Carolina foothills
- Jackson County golf will have you flying high
- Plenty of golf options available in Asheville
- Haywood County golf offers a great escape
- Toms dawns blue jacket, eyes new design career
- Wachovia turns to 'Rockovia' with Woods in the field
- Changes to No. 2 meet with Fay's approval
- The Palmer Course at Stonewall Resort
- Carolina courses escape storm's wrath unscathed
- Top Rank: Golf Magazine Smiles on Carolina Courses
- The Next Great Golf Destination may be Knocking at Your Door
- City Overview: Winston-Salem
- Rulewich on the Rise, Charlotte Area Courses Battle Drough
- He golfs, she golfs: His and hers golf trips abound in the Carolinas
- Pinehurst Resort will miss Corso's strong presence
- Panos Hotels packages golf with hospitality
- Tar Heel and Sandlapper states raise toast to a good golf year
- If the hats fit, wear them: Burt Baine juggles GM duties with playing aspirations, ESPN
- Charlotte golf rounds suffer as Panthers keep winning
- Isabel leaves Outer Banks golf courses in disarray
- If it's the fall, it must be time to overseed
- Stonebridge going long, Longview to open in October
- Kris Spence carves niche with Ross, Maples restorations
- Pine Needles set to go under the knife
- Future of municipal golf looks bright in the Carolinas
- Getting down to business in the Queen City
- Carolinas filled with top-notch spots for weekend getaways
- Getting on track with the golf trails of the Southeast
- North Carolina Piedmont features timeless charm
- Tips to help you swing into the spring golf season
- South Carolina features some of the world's greatest golf destinations
- Charlotte gears up for inaugural Wachovia Championship
- Opinion: Charlotte nowhere near golf destination status
- Carolina Winter Notebook
- Golf Digest rankings raise as many questions as answers
- Catching Up with Jay Bilas
- The Elite Eight Golf destinations
- New Courses in the North State
- Check Out the Nose on that Birdie: Golfing and Wine Tasting in the Southeast
- Golfing and Wine Tasting in the Southeast
- Golf and NASCAR in the Queen City
- Golf Instruction: Posture Often Overlooked
- Golf Travel Tips
- Charlotte's Best Golf Courses
- Affordable Golf In Charlotte
- Charlotte: Not Your Father's Queen City
- Charlotte: U.S. I-77 Traffic Features Stellar Golf
- Golf in the North Carolina Mountains
- Golf in Lancaster and Chester Counties
- Inside the 17th Hole: Wanna Bet it's a Par-3?
- Is the Queen City an emerging golf destination? Charlotte mayor is a believer
- What Makes a Great Golf Community?
- Open Golf Tee Times Revolutionizes Tee Time Shopping
Course Reviews
- Davis Love III produces two beauties in N.C.
- Hills course at Palmetto Dunes: Think man, think!
- Golden Bear course likes women, but don't get all freaked out about it
- Rose Hill worth a visit on your way to or from Hilton Head
- Conditions, challenge have improved at Island West Golf Club thanks to new management
- Okatie Creek a good play for bad putters and the young at heart
- Check Out the Nose on that Birdie: Golfing and Wine Tasting in the Southeast
- Ballantyne Resort: Where Business and Pleasure Come Together
- Charlotte National: No Frills Breeden Course in Southeast Still a Bargain
- Persimmon Hill Golf Club: Plenty of Challenges in Saluda
- Dunes West Golf Club Mixes History with Playability
- Skybrook Golf Club, Huntersville, NC
- Skybrook Golf Club (review #2), Huntersville, NC
- Springfield Golf Club, Fort Mill, SC
- Springfield Golf Club (review #2), Fort Mill, SC
- Stonebridge Golf Club, Monroe, NC
- Resort at a Glance The Grove Park Inn Resort
- Stonebridge Golf Club (review #2), Monroe, NC
- Stonebridge Golf Club (review #3), Monroe, NC
- Cypress Lakes Golf Course -- Home of the Floyds -- finds acclaim on own merits
- Bayonnet at Puppy Creek, Raeford, NC
- Warrior Golf Club, China Grove, NC
- Waterford Golf Club, Rock Hill, SC
- Olde Sycamore Golf Plantation, Charlotte, NC
- Olde Sycamore Golf Plantation (review #2), Charlotte, NC
- Ballantyne Resort (reader review), Charlotte, NC
- Ballantyne Resort, Charlotte, NC
- Charlotte National, Charlotte, NC
- Cramer Mountain Country Club, Cramerton, NC
- Crescent Golf Club, Salisbury, NC
- Tega Cay Golf Course, Teaga Cay, SC
- Tega Cay: The Ideal Day
- Boone Golf Club, Boone, NC
- Anderson Creek Golf Club a labor of Love for Davis III
- Hound Ears Golf Club, Boone, NC
