LedgeRock Golf Club is Rees Jones’ New Project

The par-5 8th hole at LedgeRock Golf Club in Mohnton, Pa. is one of many holes that will be redesigned by award-winning golf course designer Rees Jones in the next few months.

MOHNTON, Pa. — LedgeRock Golf Club, an award-winning golf course just outside Reading, has named Zach Halvonik its new Head Golf Professional Zach Halvonik.

Halvonik, a Sinking Spring native took the reins here at LedgeRock GC in January. The Penn State graduate arrives from upstate New York to help lead LedgeRock GC through its first major course renovation since the feted Rees Jones design opened for play in 2006.

“I caddied at LedgeRock a few times when I was in middle school. Back then I never realized I would be leading the LedgeRock golf operation one day,” said Halvonik, who previously served as Head Golf Professional at Bristol Harbour Lodge & Golf Club in Canandaigua, NY, following a lead assistant gig at prestigious Oak Hill Country Club, site of three U.S. Opens, three PGA Championships and a Ryder Cup.

“LedgeRock’s reputation around the Northeast might surprise you. People know and admire it up in Rochester, I can tell you that — and out on Long Island. Folks know it as a pure, golf-only club where Rees Jones did some of his very best work — over truly dramatic terrain. When we finish these renovations, it’s going to be close to perfection.”

During 2019, Jones and his team will concentrate on two holes at LedgeRock — the downhill, par-3 10th and the uphill, par-4 17th — with plans to adjust other holes going forward. Ground has already been broken this spring on 10; it should open by Memorial Day Weekend. The plan for 17 calls for construction to be completed in late 2019. Alan FitzGerald, the only course superintendent LedgeRock has ever had, will oversee the effort using in-house construction crews.

The changes will be substantial: The 10th will be equipped with an array of new tee locations, allowing this single hole to play from as many as six new angles and elevations. At the somewhat notorious 17th, Jones will soften the club’s most difficult hole.

Rees Jones founded his own design firm in 1974 with headquarters in his hometown of Montclair, New Jersey has earned dozens of awards including theDonald Ross Award, the Old Tom Morris Award and the Don A. Rossi Award.

“Every golf course needs to be reevaluated from time to time,” said Jones who has designed or redesigned more than 225 golf courses in his career. “We are taking out the cross bunker to make the hole more playable for every caliber player. On hole # 10, we are building more tee locations to create more shot variety on a daily basis.”

Jones’ design associate Bryce Swanson will direct the renovation measures on site. He explained that tree clearing on 10 got underway in 2018.

“These new tee positions make sense agronomically — more sun, more air movement, spreading the wear and tear around more tees — but they will also create some really cool, new angles of attack,” Swanson said. “The club deserves credit for taking the initiative here. They’ve demonstrated a real sophisticated vision for LedgeRock. What they did with that teaching facility, for example, was way ahead of its time — clubs just weren’t doing that sort of thing 10 years ago. We relish the opportunity to complete that vision with the renovation of these two holes.”

LedgeRock Golf Club opened in 2006, 15 minutes southwest of Reading, on 212 acres of terrain marked by striking elevation changes and riven by half a dozen roaring brooks. In an era when golf courses and private clubs are closing down in droves, LedgeRock has thrived by doubling down on golf itself.

Golf courses nationwide are indeed closing in record numbers — a net loss of some 150 each year since 2008, according to the National Golf Foundation. Private clubs have been particularly hard hit; hundreds have closed outright, but hundreds more have been obliged to go public. Berks County alone has seen a dozen golf properties shuttered over the last decade.

“The club has adjusted to what is a new, broader market,” Halvonik added, “one that really extends past Harrisburg, north of Reading, south to Lancaster and all the way into the western Main Line suburbs. That’s why we maintain the Kohl House,” a charming 4-bedroom guest cottage where members can stay the night. “The market determines a lot of what we do here, including renovating these two holes, to make the golf course that much better and attractive to prospective members.”

www.LedgRockgolf.com

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