UNIVERSITY PLACE — If you ever misspent part of your youth in scrub woods on public land close to an urban area, you know the scene — a fire pit, obscured by brush, circled by rocks and logs, surrounded by beer cans. The party hole of bored teenagers in the long twilight of a Northwest summer.
Now the same ground is trod by Tiger Woods and an elite battalion of the world’s best jet-setting golfers, followed by legions of well-heeled admirers who are part of one of the world’s most prestigious sports events — the most significant sports event hosted in the Northwest.
The transformation of Chambers Bay from badlands to world-class public destination is likely the captivating storyline of the U.S. Open that begins Thursday, almost no matter who wins — unless, of course it’s 15-year-old Cole Hammer. Or Woods, at 39 still the world’s most intriguing golfer.
The star of the show is the eight-year-old course. After 15 years of helping nurse it from preposterous to wondrous, Tony Tipton is still blinking at the extreme terrestrial makeover beneath his feet.
“The golf architects wanted to see every bit of the place,” Tipton, now Pierce County’s director of parks and recreation but a 30-year veteran of county public works jobs, said Sunday. “I listened to them describe (in 2003) what it would look like when it was done: Fairways, greens, tee boxes. I’m not an artist; I don’t have their vision and talent. I just said, ‘OK,’ and took them all over the place.
“It was worse that just wasteland; the worst sort of plants moved in — scotch broom, blackberries, scrub alder. It was like when good neighbors leave a home vacant and bad neighbors move in.”
It’s called nature’s starter kit to heal wounds from human action.
“It became the local party ground,” said Tipton, who graduated from Decatur High in Federal Way and Pacific Lutheran University in Parkland. He is wise in the ways of South Puget Sound. “Lots of logs and rocks to sit on and watch the fire — and the deer, coyotes, rabbits.”
In 1993, the county bought property while it was still a productive sand and gravel mining operation by Glacier Northwest, which proudly proclaimed that the deposits went into building every skyscraper in Seattle for more than 100 years. The sale was $40 million for 610 acres that included two miles of Puget Sound beach with a western exposure.
Mining shut down by 2003, and all of the equipment was removed. When the course opened in 2007, vestiges of the industrial history remained — concrete walls from the plant’s giant sorting bins, a dilapidated pier that served huge barges, and the shoreline railroad, still operated by BNSF.
“The remains of the mining operation creates a linkage to the industrial past,” Tipton said. “A hundred years from now people might think this was always a golf course and a park. But these reminders tell a different story.
“People come here today from Michigan or Iowa and wonder, ‘What is that?’ It launches us into a discussion about Pierce County’s blue-collar ethic and industry. That’s our roots. If we got rid of those symbols, it’s just another nice beach course.
“And people love to stop and watch the trains go by.”
To the uninitiated, the course will be confounding — instead of Doug fir, rhododendrons and lush green grass typical of narrow western Washington courses, Chambers Bay features butterscotch-colored terrain that is lumpy, sprawling, treeless and festooned with remnants of its industrial past — but on 280 acres that allows for fairways wide as football fields are long and greens the size of small European principalities.
When Fox Sports TV takes its cameras off the golf and the majestic seascape and glimpses the enormous, albeit temporary, infrastructure that puts on a U.S. Open, it’s understandable why the U.S. Golf Association jumped at Chambers Bay. Unlike any other championship-caliber course in the Northwest, the huge property can accommodate the small city that is required for staging America’s premier test of golf.
Even from my previous visit last month, Chambers Bay has burped up a massive white-tented empire — sponsor tents, hospitality tents, two merchandising tents of USGA stuff (41,000 square feet), a tent for the 1,200 credentialed media from around the world, and Fox’s own compound that is a town within a town.
There’s probably a tent for holding spare tents.
Plus grandstands at various points on the course, including a 6,000-seat bleacher, biggest in U.S. Open history — think McCarthey Sports Center for Gonzaga basketball — bordering the 18th green.
And the best part of the whole shindig — it’s a public park. No country-club preeners and poseurs. Except for about a month surrounding the mammoth undertaking of an Open, the course is open to hikers, picnickers, singers of songs and walkers of dogs.
“We have many more users for this site of its other features than users for golf,” Tipton said. “The hiking trails, the beach, the playground, the Central Meadow and the North Meadow.
“On a busy summer day, we might see 200 golfers. Meanwhile 2,000 use it for other things at the same time.”
The non-golfers get to use it for free. All they need for another return to roots is a fire pit surrounded by beach logs. I’m volunteering to supply the beer cans.
15 Comments
The reclamation angle of how this all went down over the years, and then the end product, will obviously score huge with the public. Depends on how much FOX coverage emphasizes it. What I still am not getting is if a competitor is addressing his ball and those trains roll by causing it to move, is that a penalty stroke? Technically I think it is.
While I don’t know for sure – as it would be in the local rules – I’d think it would be the same penalty as if the wind moved the ball while the player was at address.
Can’t believe there would be a penalty.
Haven’t thought about that, but I haven’t heard any of any vibration reaching the course. Worth a question.
Hey, Art, who told you where my buddies and I used to party? We had a two-level treehouse with a view of Mercer Island and Lake Washington, too…at least until the other trees grew too tall. I think it’s all part of a housing tract now. “Progress,” they call it.
I hope the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay works out for everyone with something to gain from it. I’m interested enough in golf to very occasionally watch it on TV (only on Sundays) but have zero interest in paying $200-300 per day to sit for eight hours in metal bleachers at one hole and wait eleven minutes at a time for the next three golfers to pass through. My advice to those who do? Bring a book. Tolstoy or Joyce might be long enough.
Or walk the course instead of just sitting there … which is what we’ll be doing.
That does make more sense. Those eight hours will fly.
Have a great time. If you don’t mind, if you come across any of those idiot imbeciles who yell “get in the hole” when the player is teeing off on a 550 yard par 5, please give them a kick in the you know what. thanks,
Definitely my pleasure.
You will be tired. Very tired.
I’d recommend “Russell Wilson: Standing Tall.” A tad breezier than the works of Leo and Jim.
Terrific piece, Arthur. The fire-pit framing was wonderfully evocative.
From you, Fred, that made my day.
Chambers Bay has become a new Puget Sound landmark to spot while on approach into SeaTac. I flew back into town today and we landed to the north, with the course off to our left. Pretty cool. Of course it looks great from the train to PDX too.
The full scene from the top of the bluff is astonishing.