Two top USA-based golf publications have honoured Continue reading
Tag Archives: golf club
£7.4 million funding for two key Kintyre hotels
Highlands and Islands Enterprise has today announced that a total Continue reading
As Argyll’s Machrihanish Dunes gears up for May opening, Trump’s Balmedie Golf Course goes ahead but houses on hold
Donald Trump’s lawyer, George Sorial, has announced that the tycoon’s controversial Golf Resort at Balmedie in Aberdeen is ‘full steam ahead’ with the golf course, club house, maintenance facilities and hotel. However, because of the recession, the 500 new homes planned as part of the resort are in limbo for the time being. It could be several years before these are built.
Mr Sorial knows how to talk up confidence. In suggesting there could be more Trump projects to come, he says – vaguely: ‘I wouldn’t be surprised if we made some announcements in 2009 all over the world. When we have a market like today, there’s a lot of opportunity for a developer with cash. We could be talking about Scotland and the UK. People will be pleasantly surprised. This time next year, there will be no doubt about our intentions to Scotland’.
This glosses neatly over problems the recession and the scarcity of credit have been causing for some of Trump’s companies – as For Argyll has reported earlier (see below). However, in the structure of the Trump financial empire, each company is a standalone and his personal fortune is isolated from them all.
At least Argyll’s ground-breaking eco golf links course at Machrihanish near Campbeltown – Maachrihanish Dunes – is built and due to open in May 2009 (see story below).
Earlier For Argyll stories about Trump and the recession – and about Machrihanish Dunes - are:
Kenny Dalglish opens Old Tom Morris’s restored Askernish Golf Course on South Uist
One for Golf aficionados in Argyll and elsewhere – yesterday one ball sport helped another’s latest development into being. Kenny Dalglish, Scottish footballing icon, opened the restored Old Tom Morris links course at Askernish Golf Club on South Uist and accepted the Club’s invitation to become its Honorary President.
The course is now seen as potentially one of the best links courses in the world. It’s rediscovery and restoration is a story all its own. It was designed one hundred and seventeen years ago by the internationally revered course designer, Old Tom Morris. This has already attracted one hundred members to the club from the UK and abroad – from Sweden, Canada and the USA. It is estimated that the course will soon attract around five thousand visitors a year, growing to ten thousand in four years time and, by 2012, generating around £1 million per annum for the South Uist economy.
The course has lived many lives. in several different guises. It fell into disuse and became part of crofting land. It was an airstrip. Part of it was translated into a twelve-hole course before shrinking to a longer incarnation as a nine-hole one.
Its restoration began in 2005 after a Golf consultant, Gordon Irvine who had heard that sich a course might have existed, managed to unearth it during a holiday. It cost only £50,000 because Mr Irvine’s team, including Martin Ebert, a golf architect, contribute their work for nothing. Yesterday’s opening was a beacon of hope for the future in South Uist. The course is a massive community asset and one which will support it indefinitely into the future. It’s not entirely clear of the bunker yet, though. A group of crofters have taken a case to the Scottish Land Court, arguing that valuabe grazing has been lost to a development they never consented to having.









