Golf

North Myrtle Beach golf course will remain open during renovations. Here’s what to know

James Kurtz mows the 13th green at Tidewater Golf Club just before sunrise over the Hog Inlet salt marsh. Oct. 11, 2024.
James Kurtz mows the 13th green at Tidewater Golf Club just before sunrise over the Hog Inlet salt marsh. Oct. 11, 2024. jlee@thesunnews.com

One of Grand Strand golfers’ favorite courses is undergoing a considerable renovation that will impact every bunker.

North Myrtle Beach’s Tidewater Golf Club will work on reshaping existing bunkers along the course. Brett Foti, director of sales and marketing at Tidewater Golf Club, told The Sun News via text the course had already finished bunker renovations on seven of the course’s holes.

Specifically, the course finished holes seven through nine and 15-18. Fotti wrote that holes already with redone bunkers will receive sod the week of Dec. 9, 2024.

Despite the considerable overhaul, Fotti said Tidewater will stay open throughout the renovation and only close one hole at a time for upgrades.

“It’s exciting to see these changes take shape,” He added via text message. “The updates will refresh the course’s design while maintaining its classic charm, creating an even more enjoyable experience for our golfers.”

Fotti also said the plan includes removing some select bunkers to increase the playability for all golfers and adhere to the course’s design.

The renovations come less than two years after new ownership took over the respected course.

The 18th hole at Tide Water Golf Club in North Myrtle Beach. The hole’s bunkers were reshaped as part of an ongoing renovation to the course’s bunkers.
The 18th hole at Tide Water Golf Club in North Myrtle Beach. The hole’s bunkers were reshaped as part of an ongoing renovation to the course’s bunkers. Provided by Tidewater Golf Club

KemperSports purchased the course in August 2023. The firm owns and operates high-end courses across the United States. Tidewater fits that bill, as outlets like Golf Digest previously ranked the course one of the Top 100 public courses in the United States and one of the best in South Carolina.

KemperSports Chief Operating Officer Jeremy Goldblatt told The Sun News in an October 2024 interview that the course was in good shape when bought, making more expansive upgrades unnecessary. He added the bunker work would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars but did not provide a specific figure.

Goldblatt said that improving playability —making courses easier for golfers of all levels— is part of a growing trend in the industry away from a previous push for ‘Tiger-proofing’ golf courses. Goldblatt said player experience is more important than keeping courses difficult to play.

“You want a chance to score well; you want a chance to be in the hole after your first shot. Which doesn’t mean it has to be easy, but we want to give people options a bit,” Goldblatt said. “I just think there was a trend where things just got out of hand in terms of force carries and pinpoint accuracy. Most of us don’t have an opportunity to play golf enough to be that good.”

In 2024, Sun News readers voted Tidewater their third favorite Myrtle Beach area golf course, finishing second in 2023.

Ben Morse
The Sun News
Ben Morse is the Retail and Leisure Reporter for The Sun News. Morse covers local business and Coastal Carolina University football and was awarded third place in the 2023 South Carolina Press Association News Contest for sports beat reporting and second place for sports video in the all-daily division. Morse previously worked for The Island Packet, covering local government. Morse graduated from American University in 2023 with a Bachelor’s Degree in journalism and economics and is originally from Prospect, Kentucky.
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