Originally
from Indiana, Gary Kern is a throwback to the days of his idols in architecture,
Tillinghast, Mackenzie and Ross. Operating as a one-man operation out
of his home, he is comfortable with his sales pitch. "I never beat
the bushes for business. I always let the business just come in,"
he says. It has been coming in since he stumbled into the design business
back in Indiana in the late 60's.
By the early 1980's, Kern moved
his business to St. Louis. His first major commission was to turn a quirky
nine hole public layout into a 18-hole private club. It was through this
first St. Louis project that the golf community discovered Kern's philosophy
of 'tough from the tips but friendly from the front.' "I like to
do golf coursed that pose a back tee problem for good players," he
explains. "I think they need that in order to be perceived by the
public as a top golf course. They also need that to be a potential venue
for a top tournament." "At the same time, I try to design the
regular tees and forward tees at such a location and relationship to the
hazards and the angles of the shots so that these folks can make it around
without an undo amount of difficulty. These people are the ones the game
is dependent upon rather than the pros and the scratch players."
"To me the important thing is that golf should be fun. I want players
to walk off my golf course and say, 'I can't wait to get back here to
play again.' That means it was enjoyable. Golf should always be a challenge
but it should be an achievable challenge for the player and something
that he is able to do. If you can do that mix it in with some good challenge
and some aesthetic beauty, that's what it's all about.
Above all else, though, it
is nature that remains at the heart of a Kern design. Enormous sums of
money can be expended moving even larger quantities of soil to give new
courses a "natural look." Kern believes his talent may be the
ability to achieve that same result with a different approach. "My
strength is my imagination and ability o route a golf course integrating
it into the land. I like for my courses to have a very beautiful look
to them but be very playable. We're all different. I just try to go to
that natural look with a lot of aesthetic value." |
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