Divine 2BHK / 3BHK apartments units

Posted by Prestige Project
5
Dec 14, 2015
117 Views

Prestige has shaped the skyline of South India with growths spanning across Housing, Commercial, and Retail, Leisure & Hospitality sectors. Having completed 157 Ventures spanning a total developed region of over 44.08 million square feet, Prestige has another 61 ventures lined up, totalling 62.29 million square feet, which include apartment enclaves, shopping malls and corporate structures. Augusta has been modified many times over the years, from it greens to it bunkers to it tee Prestige Park Square  to it water hazards. Some traditionalists remain ticked over the changes, including the fact that Augusta now plays longer than 7,400 yards. But the course hasn’t lost much of or mystique.Conditioning aside, Slattery says, Augusta is great for golf, and the Masters continued popularity only exposes more people to the game.The tournament reaches millions of people all over the world. Slattery says. It’s just great exposure for gold the history of the Masters is second to none.Slattery remembers watching the Masters on TV when he was a kid, and Big Three Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player where ducking it out for a green jacket. The Big Three dominated the Masters From 1960 through 1978, winning the event 12 times among them during that span.The Masters was one of the most successful golf tournaments brought to TV and had some really exciting finishes that made people fall in love with the game, Slattery says.

While Taylor appreciates Augusta’s blooming azaleas and tailored bunkers, he as well as admires Augusta for keeping prices affordable for those who attend the Masters. The tournament is known for its modest ticket and concession prices no $10 Bud Lites sold there.They could really charge an exorbitant amount for tickets, food and merchandise, Taylor adds Taylor as well as respects Augusta for running the Masters the way it wants to, from providing pristine course conditions to allowing a minimal amount of advertising by CBS during the broadcast Augusta officials say This is tournament, and this is how it’s going to be Taylor says.As much as has a fan, Slattery says Augusta could help it images by openly embracing the environmental movement afoot in golf and even becoming an Audubon Cooperate Sanctuary, a certification other things Augusta certainly has the resources and exposure to become an effect leader [in the environmental movement Slattery says. Augusta would be a great role model.If anything, some superintendents dismiss the Augusta Syndrome and view the courses approach to conditioning as a model to improve. Rick Slattery, golf course superintendent at Locust Hill Country Club in Rochester, Latest York, says Augusta is the measuring stick for golf courses and superintendents.Whether we like it or not, our golf courses have always been compared to Augusta, Slattery adds.What wrong with trying to measure up to the way Augusta appears during Masters week, Slattery asks used Augusta as measuring stick throughout my career, he adds. Slattery realizes his course, which has hosted several LPGA tournaments, doesn’t have budget and resources that Augusta does. But that doesn’t stop him from studying Augusta’s nuances in an attempt to become a better superintendent at his own facility.

The beauty of golf is that it’s not played on a regulated sized or shaped playing field, Slattery says. Every golf course has a different character and a unique individuality about it. That one reason the four major tournaments are so ideal each venue has its own style and character in regards to how the golf course plays for a championship, from the seaside windblown golf courses for the British Open to the Prestige Park Square Bangalore parkland feel of Augusta.The Augusta Syndrome and the courses impeccable are partly based on the assumption that the course uses more inputs that other course. It’s assumed that Augusta’s Brilliant emerald ryegrass fairways grew from copious amounts of water and fertilizer.Junkin knows better. Being from the South he understands that it doesn’t take much to get ryegrass to pop in early April when the average daily temperature is 75 degrees Fahrenheit during the day and 55 degrees at night.You don’t have to do much to it to make it look great, he says, if you get your pre-emergent herbicide out before you oversee and keep all the Poa Annua out and fertilize, it’s not rocket science to get it to look beautiful and ideal at that time of the year.Stiffer, who has grown ryegrass, appreciates the role that mother Nature’s plays in getting Augusta ready for the Masters.The reason they ryegrass looks so beautiful is because it’s at its peak, he says.Every time I go there, threes nothing out of place, he says.Junkin isn’t alone among gold course superintendents in their affinity for Augusta Superintendent magazine recently surveyed about 400 superintendents and asked them, what the greatest golf course in the country? There were nine courses from which to choose, including Augusta, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Pine Valley Golf Club, kilometre onto Country Club, Shinne cock Hills Golf Club, Cypress Point Club, Sand Hills Golf Club, Midfield Village Golf Club and Merion Golf Clubs East Course. Augusta raced a whopping 49 percent of the votes as the greatest pine Valley was second at 11 percent.Interestingly, Augusta overtook Pine Valley as the No.1 course in Golf Digests most recent list of Americas 100 Greatest Golf Courses.The fact that Augusta won the vote by a landslide is somewhat of a surprise considering the ramifications of the controversial Augusta Syndrome, which superintendents often cite as a problem in golf. The Augusta Syndrome is a condition that occurs when golfers watch the Masters on television, witness Augusta National in all its glory, and then ask the superintendents of the courses they play why their conditions don’t resemble Augusta’s. Alas, superintendents blame Augusta National specifically Augusta during the week of the Masters for creating expectation problems at their courses.Considering the results of our survey, though, the Augusta Syndrome hasn’t caused too many superintendents to resent and dislike the famed course, designed by Alistair Mackenzie and Bobby Jones, the latter of who founded Augusta with Clifford Roberts. Augusta, built on a former plantation amidst Georgia pines in central Georgia, opened in 1932.The precision that defines Augusta seemingly not a blade of grass out of place and nary a petal of Poa annua doesn’t bother Matthew Stiffer, superintendent of Lake Forest Country Club, an 18-hole private club in Lake St. Louis, Missouri. That said, Seiffert is under the impression that Augusta’s budget doesn’t have much of a ceiling.If his clubs members asked him why Lake Forests bunkers aren’t as finely manicured and as stately looking as Augusta’s, Stiffer says he would immediately steer the conversation toward the cost associated with that kind of things isn’t cheap, he explains.

 

d
Comments
avatar
Please sign in to add comment.