Real estate couldn’t get anymore classic. With gorgeous houses located over the green such as that on Crow Creek Golf Course, even non golfers would be hard pressed into acquiring real estate on golf courses. A home in the midst of a green can have its benefits even lacking the passion for golf; heck, you will even put up with the occasional plopping of a golf ball bomb into your bowl of soup, provided you have that spectacular view of that 18th hole. Verdant green typical to a golf course is one huge benefit, a very huge one. In fact, when Golf Digest ranked Real Estate Golf Courses at Myrtle Beach as the top golf market for 2006, it became clear that real estate golf courses can have a huge reward on return investment even than the course itself.
Like the Crow Creek Real Estate Golf Courses at Myrtle Beach. And it is nothing short of magnificent in itself. This golf course real estate at Myrtle Beach is a scenic layout set on developer Jerry McLamb’s 500-acre family homestead. It was created by the renowned architect Rick Robbins, who also had worked with Jack Nicklaus on a numerous occasion. Since its opening in February of 2000, many have praised the Crow Creek Golf Course Real Estate at Myrtle Beach for its aesthetic qualities as well as its imaginative challenges.
The prospective buyers of Crow Creek Golf Course Real Estate at Myrtle Beach can celebrate on lasting benefits. Like the community at Crow Creek Golf Course Real Estate at Myrtle Beach being already a firm organizational structure. There is already a functioning homeowner’s association that coordinates homeowners on the maintenance of common areas and even the resident’s club facilities like the Crow Creek Amenities Center. There are already plans for public utilities like telephone, Brunswick electric service, Brunswick water service, and cable.
Real estate golf courses at Myrtle Beach or any other golf courses for that matter have its own set of risk though. And the worst risk of all is the closure of the golf itself. And in contradicting reality you will find that after paying a huge amount for a golf course home suddenly your home is left without one. It happened on several accounts like when the administrations of Colonial Charters Golf and Country Club, Bay Tree Plantation, and Eastport announced that it will be closing the golf club for redevelopment. After all, what’s to prevent the golf club management to shut operations if the golf course business is already failing?
Other event besides, real estate golf courses are still attracting warranted attention, even with the danger of errant missiles and numerable shutting golf courses.
Milos Pesic is an avid golfer and owner of the most comprehensive Golf Information Pages. Visit now to find out all you wanted to know about golf, golf equipment, tips, resorts and much more.
{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }
Delhi Bed And BreakFast 04.05.10 at 5:21 am
Something is amiss in the Myrtle Beach golf industry. Golfers are still flocking to the Grand Strand area for golf vacations in Myrtle Beach. But, golf courses are closing their doors in record numbers. Why?
SEO link vine bonus 04.20.10 at 10:45 pm
Actually, Lakeside manages to be in two cities. The main entrance gate and part of the parking lot are in Burbank, but the clubhouse and most or all of the course is in L.A.
SEO link vine bonus 05.07.10 at 9:27 pm
The plan, if it goes ahead, includes condos built on the fairways that now run between the condos of Robbers Roost Villas. The holes, ringed by cart tracks and longneedled pines, have been better maintained than those at Bay Tree, with most of the grass cropped to ankle level.
Ice skates 05.22.10 at 4:12 am
I am told that some of these golf courses work directly with certain Myrtle Beach Hotels
Ice skates 05.24.10 at 11:58 pm
The course was designed by Larry Young in the early 80’s who later called upon the then little known Mike Strantz to redesign the greens and do some bunker tweaking in the ‘90’s. What I like most about Heritage, aside from its sheer plantation beauty, is that length and power are not a great advantage here, this is a shot maker’s course.
Ice skates 06.01.10 at 10:23 pm
Your point about marketing hype is generally true, but I played the former Sea Gull and maintain a second home just down the road from it. I have been watching the transformation for two years and can testify that the new Founders is totally different from the old Sea Gull, unrecognizable really.
SEO link vine bonus 06.03.10 at 12:09 am
The course was designed by Larry Young in the early 80’s who later called upon the then little known Mike Strantz to redesign the greens and do some bunker tweaking in the ‘90’s. What I like most about Heritage, aside from its sheer plantation beauty, is that length and power are not a great advantage here, this is a shot maker’s course. Due to challenging pin placements with subtle breaks in the greens, the second shot is everything.
SEO link vine bonus 07.03.10 at 4:24 am
The real difficulty comes in the profusion of water hazards that drown nearly every hole, most alarmingly at the 8th and 14th, a pair of all-carry par-3s that clock in at more than 240 yards from the back tees.
tej kohli 07.26.10 at 11:22 pm
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