Quincy opens new golf clubhouse
Now open to the public is the new Furnace Brook Golf Course Clubhouse in Quincy.
This is a new building that replaced a house that was 100 years old. It had been converted to a clubhouse for golf but lacked the necessary accessibility for a public building. Construction began in 2022 when the city became the owner of the golf course.
The community participated in the construction of the clubhouse. There was a Values Workshop and other meetings of the community to solicit input from golfers, the community at large, neighbors, and the professional design team of the city.
The clubhouse has a covered deck. A dining area and bar; pro-shop; storage indoors for carts; locker rooms; administrative offices; and four golf simulators. The simulators will be open to the public all year and will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis. Dave Murphy, Commissioner of Natural Resources, said that the golf simulator will help to generate revenue all year, which is something new for the golf course, and it also enables people who have not been exposed to golf and new golfers to be instructed in the sport.
Brochure printing can be used to provide more details on such features and amenities.
Landscaping and finished pavement will continue to be developed in the spring as the temperatures warm. The putting green is also being rebuilt and will be moved to the area of the first tee. It will be open by early summer.
This is a new building that replaced a house that was 100 years old. It had been converted to a clubhouse for golf but lacked the necessary accessibility for a public building. Construction began in 2022 when the city became the owner of the golf course.
The community participated in the construction of the clubhouse. There was a Values Workshop and other meetings of the community to solicit input from golfers, the community at large, neighbors, and the professional design team of the city.
The clubhouse has a covered deck. A dining area and bar; pro-shop; storage indoors for carts; locker rooms; administrative offices; and four golf simulators. The simulators will be open to the public all year and will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis. Dave Murphy, Commissioner of Natural Resources, said that the golf simulator will help to generate revenue all year, which is something new for the golf course, and it also enables people who have not been exposed to golf and new golfers to be instructed in the sport.
Brochure printing can be used to provide more details on such features and amenities.
Landscaping and finished pavement will continue to be developed in the spring as the temperatures warm. The putting green is also being rebuilt and will be moved to the area of the first tee. It will be open by early summer.