![]() |
||
|---|---|---|
Destination:Falling into Luxury With new entries and reinvented properties, upscale Scottsdale has never had more to offer sophisticated golf travelers |
||
|
By
Tom Cunneff In the winter of 1888, army chaplain and Civil War hero Winfield Scott paid $1,600 for a 640-acre tract east of Phoenix in the Salt River Valley. The same year, nearly a continent away in Yonkers, just north of New York City, Scotsman John Reid established Saint Andrew’s Golf Club, generally acknowledged as the birthplace of golf in America. More than a century later, Scott’s foreboding landscape and Reid’s transplanted game have come together in a way neither man possibly could have imagined. Today, the challenging desert layouts, beautiful scenery and fabulous weather of Scottsdale, Arizona, the city that bears Winfield’s name, attract more than two million golfers a year. They stay at newly refurbished resorts like the Fairmont Princess and Four Seasons, along with iconic mainstays like the Boulders, Phoenician and Camelback Inn. They flock to play new courses like the Saguaro course at We-Ko-Pa Golf Club, redesigned ones like the Champions course at TPC Scottsdale and the reconfigured Troon North layouts, as well as longtime favorites like Grayhawk and Legend Trail. But as good as the golf is, there is a lot more to the town than little white balls arcing against cobalt skies and landing on pristinely maintained emerald turf framed perfectly against the stark desert terrain. No doubt you caught some of the star-studded Super Bowl celebrations or the “Greatest Party on Grass,” a.k.a. the FBR Open—the final round took place on the same day as football’s biggest game. Clearly, the Wild West is alive and well in Scottsdale. Princess of Scottsdale The hotel also offers 119 luxury casitas, and the grounds are
gorgeous, especially at night with the palm trees lit and the sweet scent of
juniper in the air from one of the five outdoor fireplaces. But the hotel’s
highlight is the 44,000-square-foot Willow Stream spa, an elegant fusion of
glass, stone, water and wood. (It took two workers a year to lay the dry-stacked
blond rock wall in the reception area.) The Golf Performance Treatment, a
combination of massage, stretching and acupressure, and Fit to a Tee, a
golf-specific strength and flexibility program, do a wonderful job of
alleviating the worries of spa-phobic men.
A new restaurant, Talavera, and lounge, Onyx, were part of a $15 million
enhancement that also included updating of the spacious rooms, which
come with
fireplaces, 42-inch flat-screen TVs and overstuffed coziness.
The suites have
telescopes and custom constellation charts for
stargazing, while all rooms have
private balconies that offer terrific
views of the distant city and nearby
Pinnacle Peak, which has a
comfortably pitched hiking trail easily accessible
from the property.
The “new” Pinnacle and Monument courses remain classic desert layouts with velvet ribbons of fairway bordered and bisected by strikingly rugged terrain with the iconic saguaro cacti standing sentry. The tee times are generously spaced, so you never feel hemmed in. If you’re lucky, you might even see a bobcat stalking a rabbit. Nights and days in Scottsdale Since the 1980s, water restrictions have limited new courses to 90
acres of irrigated turf; architects often have used much less to design
exacting, target-style layouts. But the landing areas at We-Ko-Pa’s
Saguaro
course are very generous. The course is meant to be played as
much along the
ground as through the air. A perfect example is the
downhill 255-yard 15th,
which looks intimidating from the tee. But a
well-judged tee shot landing short
and right will carom off a slope and
roll onto the green for a chance at
birdie. For a more parkland-like experience, try Kierland Golf Club at the Westin Kierland Resort & Spa in the heart of Scottsdale. Scott Miller, who also designed We-Ko-Pa’s Cholla course, built a lush 27-hole facility, which was renovated in 2002 when the hotel opened. The club is full of extra amenities, like an air-conditioned canopy on the range. And in lieu of climate-controlled carts, guests can rent Segways that make getting around the course a lot more fun—and faster. If shaving a few strokes off your game is a priority, Kierland offers two top instructors, Mike and Sandy LaBauve, a husband-wife tandem who come with some serious lineage: Sandy is the daughter of legendary teacher Jack Lumpkin. The family-friendly resort is a stylishly modern hotel with an elaborate water park, kids club and teen lounge. But there’s plenty for adults, too, like the 15,000-square-foot spa that specializes in native and Far East treatments and Kierland Commons, a trendy, pedestrian-friendly, 38-acre shopping and dining area just a short walk away. Clearly, Scottsdale has a lot to offer these days to golfers and non-golfers alike. Winfield Scott would hardly recognize it. |
||