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Overton Park 9 muni reopens in Memphis with fun updates

Overton Park 9 muni reopens in Memphis with fun updates

King-Collin Golf Design has built a reputation for packing plenty of fun into small golf courses, with its nine-hole Sweetens Cove ranking as the No. 1 public-access course in Tennessee.

Now Rob Collins, the firm’s principal designer, has taken a similar approach at an historic nine-hole municipal course, the newly renamed Overton Park 9 in Memphis. Collins and his crew recently completed a renovation and the course reopened in late June, putting the focus squarely on fun and accessibility.

Perhaps the best part at the 2,275-yard course: Kids play free. And nobody pays much, as the online resident rate for nine holes is $7 and the seniors rate is $4.

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The project was completed at just under $2 million, the managing Overton Park Conservatory reported, with most of that coming from private donations. King-Collins started work in January of 2021 in renovating the tired muni.

Built through old-growth forest and using the existing footprint as a starting point alongside a nature park, Collins designed a series of half-par holes with only one, No. 8, stretching beyond 300 yards. The course is wide and playable, with most grass cut at fairway height but with more than 10 acres of native grasses that still require a touch of accuracy without being overly punitive. Pop-up mounds and bunkers offer challenge without threatening the loss of too many golf balls.

The closest comparison Collins could think of to his work at Overton Park is Winter Park Golf Course, “which is great,” he said. Near Orlando, the municipal nine-holer frequently known as WP9 was renovated by Keith Rhebb and Riley Johns in 2016 and has become a darling of the community as well as traveling golfers, and its short length combined with incredible greens complexes have earned high regard while thrilling players of all levels.

Collins said he was presented a similar opportunity in Memphis.

“Overton Park, for us, was an interesting exercise and an opportunity for us to expand our creativity a little bit and show a different side of ourselves,” Collins told Golfweek as the project neared completion. “We didn’t move a ton of dirt there, and it’s just a small course. The greens are right on top of the ground, all that kind of stuff. It’s a different look for us, but we were still able to kind of put some creative, neat features and quirks into it that give it its own special flair and…

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