

BallenIsles Country Club in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, is adding a new 10-hole short course and a putting course, both of which will be designed by golf course architect Rees Jones.
With holes ranging in length from 80 yards to 160 yards and a nine-hole putting course covering a combined 4 acres, the $6 million project is scheduled to open in fall 2026, according to BallenIsles.
"We are so proud of the work Rees Jones and Bryce Swanson did with us (on the South Course) in 2019 that we could not wait for the opportunity to work with them again," Jeff Fitzherbert, BallenIsles director of golf, said.
"We are eager to get to work and see what the Rees Jones design team will come up this time."
The East Course at BallenIsles Country Club, No. 14 shown here, was the site of the 1971 PGA Championship when the facility was known as PGA National Golf Club. BallenIsles photo The 54-hole BallenIsles was developed in 1964 as PGA National Golf Club by entrepreneur and philanthropist John D. MacArthur, who also is credited with developing and naming Palm Beach Gardens five years earlier in 1959.
The club's East and North courses, both designed by Dick Wilson and Joe Lee, opened in 1964. The East Course was the one-time home of the PGA Tour Qualifying School, and Jack Nicklaus won the 1971 PGA Championship there.
Rees Jones most recently renovated the Wilson/Lee-designed South Course in 2019.
Wilson was the architect of other notable South Florida designs like Pine Tree in Boynton Beach and the Blue Course at Trump Doral in Miami. Lee is credited with more than 100 designs worldwide, including dozens in Florida.
When the PGA of America moved across Florida's Turnpike in 1973, its former home was renamed JDM Country Club in MacArthur's honor. It remained JDM until 1988 when the foundation bearing MacArthur's name sold the property that was renamed BallenIsles Country Club.
The PGA of America moved its headquarters from Palm Beach Gardens in 2022 to Frisco, Texas.
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