The cover story in the February 15 issue of GolfWorld featured the new Robert Trent Jones, Jr course near Tacoma, Washington, Chambers Bay. The course opened only a year ago and will be hosting the U.S. Open in 2015.

Chambers Bay/Seattle Times Photo
Chambers Bay is a municipal golf course that cost $20 million to build over an old gravel mine near Puget Sound. A set of train tracks runs parallel to several holes. It is a fabulous use of land that was too important to abandon and probably too expensive to develop for housing. Every element of the course is man-made, yet the links design, use of natural plantings, hardy fescue turf for fairways, rough and greens, and Puget Sound in the background give Chambers Bay the same kind of look and feel as St. Andrews Course in Scotland.
Like Harborside International here in Chicago, Chambers Bay relies on wind for challenging golfers. Both courses are built on industrial property near water where wind is a factor every day. Both are links style, sans trees, and cost substantially more than your typical munie golf course: $75 to $200 per round.
However, unlike Harborside where you have to use a cart, Chambers Bays offers only pull carts or caddies. That's right. NO CARTS. No cart paths. Chambers Bay is a walking only facility. That $200 round includes a caddie, which is the best way to play golf in my opinion.
I'd love to get good enough to play Chambers Bay before it hosts the U.S. Open. I hope it does really well and that walking becomes the new trend in course design. Golf can be good for the environment when it shows up like the new Chambers Bay course. Congratulations, Tacoma Washington and Robert Trent Jones, Jr.
Note: Chambers Bay was certified on August 14, 2007 by Audubon International as a Silver Signature Sanctuary, the first golf course in the state of Washington and in the Pacific Northwest to receive this designation.