The
K Club
The
Kildare Hotel & Country Club, popularly known
as The K Club, offers superb accommodations and
another magnificent American style parkland course.
The K Club is the fulfilled vision of one man, Dr.
Michael J. Smurfit, an Irishman of impeccable business
credentials. Smurfit is very rich on paper and because
of paper. Starting as a boy selling paper on his
motor scooter, he began to buy up foundering paper
companies and now is the chairman of the Jefferson
Smurfit Group with huge paper holdings worldwide.
His
vision for the K Club was no less ambitious. He
simply wanted to create a world class hotel and
golf club. Most Irish would agree the club is elegant;
but several golfers told me, "It's not Ireland".
Yes and no. The course's features are definitely
American, but the hotel is unmistakably European.
The
K Club is located in the little village of Straffan,
a few miles off N4, the national highway connecting
Dublin to points northwest. About 20 miles west
of Dublin, Straffan is in County Kildare in horse
and farm country where the land is flat and the
air fresh and the mountains quite a distance off.
Smurfit
bought Straffan House and the surrounding gardens
and grounds in 1988 and immediately began to enlarge
and restore the manor, sparing no expense to replicate
the historic house's original glory. Straffan house
dates back to feudal times and over the centuries
it has passed through the hands of English dukes
and earls, Anglo Norman military leaders and, more
recently, prominent Irish families. Most notable
of these were the Bartons who owned extensive wineries
in Bordeaux and redesigned the house after a French
chateau. A campanile tower, still a prominent feature
of the house, revealed an Italian influence as well.
The tower stands between the original wing and an
exact duplicate west wing which was added in the
conversion.
Ireland's
only Grade AA 5 Red Star hotel, the K Club hotel
is a masterwork of grand style, featuring English
hand made wall paper, French weave rugs, Waterford
chandeliers, Georgian fireplaces, reproduction Chippendale
furniture, and some 600 paintings including a sizeable
collection of Jack B. Yeats, the poet's brother.
All 45 bedrooms are individually appointed and some
include bathrooms with Jacuzzi baths.
In
back, the hotel looks out over gardens, a pond,
cypress and copper beach trees, majestic oaks and
the Liffey River, a pastoral stream at this point
that serpentines through the estate. The view from
the river back up to the hotel would make a perfect
cover for an Irish romance novel.
The
golf course was designed by Arnold Palmer and Ed
Seay, his lead architect. Opened in 1990, the course
suffered heavy damage from the frequent rains. To
correct the problem a state of the art drainage
system was installed. Also, the greens were completely
rebuilt. Today, the course is in mint condition,
drawing raves from many European Tour pros who can
be seen here frequently practicing or playing. U.S.
and European golf officials, having received a lot
of heavy lobbying from many clubs, clearly agreed,
designating The K Club to host the 2005 Ryder Cup.
Like
Druids Glen, the golf course, which also hosts the
Smurfit European Open, is terrific. At 6776 yards
from the whites (7159 from the back), this par 72
jewel is arguably Palmer's best design, featuring
wide, flat bunkers; water everywhere; modest elevation
changes on the back 9; and beautiful vistas of the
hotel and grounds, particularly at the signature
7th hole, a magnificent 600 yard hole that winds
along the Liffey to a green situated on a small
island in the river. A 19th century iron bridge
crosses one branch of the river and connects the
fairway to the green.
Meticulously
landscaped, the course is served by a modern clubhouse
that includes a cozy 19th hole (the scene of much
beer hoisting and round rehashing) and a balcony
overlooking the 518 yard 18th hole that is sure
to provide memorable theater during the Ryder Cup.
A shower of bunkers guards the landing area at the
crest of a hill, from where players are enticed
to go for the green flanked by another bunker shower
and a steep bank on the right and by a lake on the
left that cuts well in front of the green.
By
the end of 2000, a second Palmer design will open
across the Liffey on what is now treeless pasture
land. The finished blueprints call for a links-like
layout. A second clubhouse will serve the course. 
For
hotel reservations call + 353 627 3333 (From the
U.S. enter 011 in place of +).
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Co. Down, Royal Portrush
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| Royal
Dublin | Druids
Glen
The
K Club | Rosses
Point, Enniscrone, Carne |
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