TEMECULA, Calif. (Oct. 4, 2007) — Course construction is complete and a 2008 grand opening scheduled for The Journey at Pechanga, the latest design from worldly-wise architect Steve Forrest.
Forrest, a principal with Toledo, Ohio-based Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates (www.arthurhills.com) and sitting president of the American Society of Golf Course Architects (ASGCA), designed this southern California track fresh off a pair of award-winning projects in Sweden. The Journey at Pechanga — centerpiece of the burgeoning Pechanga Resort and Casino — marks a departure in style and setting, but not drama.
"I’ve never worked a site quite like this one. The Journey sets out at the base of a large mountain, crosses the Pechanga River, a dry wash where I have not yet seen any water, then basically sets off into the sky," says Forrest, who estimates the layout rises and falls some 300 feet in the course of 18 holes. "With that much elevation change, you’re going to be in a cart anyway, quite frankly. So we made the decision early on in the design process to take full advantage of the terrain — we created some spectacular holes we could never have accessed or achieved on a ‘walking’ course."
To illustrate his point, Forrest cites the par-3 17th, "Island in the Sky", with its green perched at the terminus of a high-desert ridge and its tee boxes benched into a hillside across a steep-sided canyon. He’s also a fan of the 18th, a modern par-4 of dramatic modern construction that nevertheless finishes at a classic Biarritz putting surface; and the inimitable 420-yard 6th, which drops some 300 feet tee to green. "The hang time there is stupendous, between 8 and 10 seconds," the architect says. "If you hit just right, you can almost drive the green thanks to the speed slot we created on one side of the landing zone."
Forrest and his colleagues Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates excel at this sort of intriguing design flourish: the canny combination of the bold and traditional, the scenic and strategic. It’s what distinguishes the firm’s recent work: the new Forrest designs in Sweden — Sand Golf Club, just more than year old but already ranked by Golf Digest among the world’s Top 100 courses outside the United States (#82), and Hills Golf Club, named by Travel+Leisure Golf magazine in among the top 10 courses to open worldwide in 2005 — and Wolfdancer Golf Club at the Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort in Austin, Texas, designed by Hills/Forrest partner Chris Wilczynski and named to GOLF Magazine’s coveted "Top 10 New Courses You Can Play" for 2006.
Forrest sees the same potential in The Journey at Pechanga, whose challenging yet sensitive construction has progressed alongside that of the ever-expanding resort complex.
"It’s a very impressive place that has probably tripled in size during my two years on site," Forrest says. "It’s really become a destination, with the casinos, a comedy club, so many restaurants and the hotel towers. Everything has been done first class, from their telecommunications capabilities, to the traffic flow, to the accommodations, to the golf.
"However, because it all took shape on Native American land, everything was done with extreme environmental and cultural sensitivity. Pechanga culture believes that spirits reside in oak trees and elderberry bushes, so they must be respected and protected. We moved 150 oak trees, as opposed to cutting them down. Some were simply untouchable, as were several burial grounds, of course, and so holes were carefully routed to accommodate them."
Forrest has brought this emphasis on environmental responsibility to his term as president of the ASGCA, which began in April 2007 and will run for one year. Indeed, the Forrest Administration will issue the ASGCA’s third edition of "Environmental Approach to Golf Development" handbook in October (visit www.asgca.org for details).
Forrest delights in The Journey’s on-course cultural exhibits such as wooden teepees and cedar houses that tell the story of the Pechanga people. He loves how the exhibits contrast with the layout’s modern design touches: the man-made water features on the 5th and 13th holes and the impressive bridges that span the property’s many canyons and dry washes. "The bridges are features on the golf landscape that normally an architect attempts to hide," he says, "but these are very unique and attractive structures."
Based in Toledo, Ohio, Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates has designed more than 190 original courses, 35 of which have hosted PGA Tour, European PGA Tour, Champions Tour, LPGA Tour, USGA and PGA of America events. Oitavos Dunes, a 2002 Hills/Forrest design, has signed on to host to the European PGA Tour’s Open of Portugal through 2009. The firm’s 130 renovation projects include the refurbishment and preparation of three U.S. Open sites: Oakland Hills, Oakmont and Inverness.
Contact:
Hal Phillips
Phillips Golf Media/Mandarin Media
207-926-3700
onintwo@maine.rr.com
Quentin Lutz
Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest & Associates
419-841-8553
QLutz@ArthurHills.com