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History of the Institute

Bruno Steensels (left)with Howard
Swan (right)at the British Institute of Golf Course
Architects International Conference,Wentworth,1998 |
On the 3rd July 2000,at the Crown Plaza Hotel
in London,the three leading golf course architects' organisations
in Europe merged to form the European Institute of Golf
Course Architects.
Over 30 years'previously,on the 14th July 1971,in London
at the Great
Western Hotel,Paddington,eight golf course architects met
together to establish an association of professional golf
course architects.
Four or five founding fathers, all highly individual, independent
minded, active architects, all of whom had a rare combination
of skills,partly self-taught, partly learnt from contact
with a number of the great architectural figures of the
earlier part of the century, succeeded in developing a common
sense of purpose and corporate framework for converting
individual flair into professional qualifications.
That original purpose -really the establishing and signalling
of the importance and respectability of the subject and
work remains undiluted in everything the European Institute
does today.
The British Association of Golf Course Architects,as it
was then known, flourished throughout the 70s and 80s although,with
very strict entrance criteria demanding experience and expertise
in the field of golf course design,numbers grew only slowly
in initial years.
In the early 1990s,the British Association changed its name
to the British Institute, a change not only in title but
also in emphasis,moving from a loose association of likeminded
and similarly qualified individuals to a more formal Institute,conscious
of its role in supporting all members and,equally importantly,providing
education for prospective golf architects.
During the Silver Jubilee year of 1996, the Institute established
its permanent headquarters at Merrist Wood House in Worplesdon,Surrey,England
and also set up a Continuing Professional Development programme
to educate its members on various aspects of our profession.
It began a series of regular conferences, attracting wide-ranging
audiences from outside the profession on related topics
to golf course design.
At the Institute's Silver Jubilee Dinner held at Wentworth
in October 1996, the Institute awarded silver medals to
four Fellows for their outstanding contribution to golf
course architecture Don Harradine, Fred Hawtree, Eddie Hackett
and Hamilton Stutt. A further medal was awarded to Geoffrey
Cornish,an Honorary Member of the Institute.
The following January, the Institute welcomed the first
intake to its Diploma in Golf Course Architecture,held at
Merrist Wood in association with the College, and being
a one-year distance learning Diploma with eight weeks residential
study at Merrist Wood.
Eight students enrolled on that first year and similar numbers
have continued to benefit from the assistance of Members
in the running and tuition of the course.
The French Association of Golf Course Architects was founded
by Robert Berthet in 1983,initially comprising 20 members,
to reinforce the image of professionalism and a high quality
of design.

Peter Harradine |
With a huge expansion of golf within France
itself,with over 300 courses built during the 1980s and 1990s,
mostly designed by Association members, AFAG were instrumental
in the expansion of the game throughout France.
However,its members were also able to export their knowledge
and to contribute to the global development of the game, with
many countries in the world carrying the signature of its
members.
The European Society of Golf Course Architects was founded
by Gerold Hauser (Austria),who became the first President
of ESGA from 1989 to 1994.
With an office in Vienna,Austria, the Society's influence
with members from numerous countries spread throughout Europe,with
the concentration of members in Germany and Austria.
Gerold Hauser was succeeded as President by Ramon Espinosa
(Spain) and by Peter Harradine (Switzerland), son of one of
the founders of the British Institute, Donald Harradine.
Although there was a very small number
of members who were uncertain about the benefits, the Institute's
Council was steadfast in its support for the principle of
the merger

Alain Prat |
By the early 1990s,all three organisations
were actively discussing internally the question of mergers
with the other organisations, especially as each individual
Association felt that the "European" idea had
became more and more an essential base for the future development
of a real European Association. For example,by the mid 1990s
half of the membership of the British Institute was based
on the mainland of Europe. Alain Prat,the then President
of AFAG, contacted the British Institute to launch a basis
for the exchange and laid the foundations of a future European
Association ,which resulted in 1994 in the signing of the
first Protocol of Alliance, signed by Alain Prat and the
President of the British Institute, Martin Hawtree.
The following year,1995,the agreement was widened
to include the European Society of Golf Course Architects,
and a second protocol signed with ESGA, presented by Ramon
Espinosa at a splendid ceremony at The Wentworth Club during
the Institute's International Conference.
The formation of a Council and then a Federation
of European Golf Course Architects paved the way for the
merger with regular meetings between the representatives
of the three organisations, initially in Brussels and at
a final meeting in Paris, when all outstanding items were
discussed.
The talks were not only on how the merger could be possible,
but also included lengthy discussions over the maintenance
of standards of practice, upgrading and rationalisation
of membership entry, and the standardisation of membership
categories, thereby resolving any differences and anomalies
between the organisations and ensuring that a general agreement
was reached during this period of consultations.
Not unsurprisingly,these discussions lasted many years,but
by early 1999 British Institute President, Howard Swan,
reported to the Annual General Meeting that a firm proposal
for a merger was in place.
Although there was a very small number of members
who were uncertain about the benefits,the Institute's Council
was steadfast in its support for the principle of the merger
and,at an EGM held in September of that year,the resolution
to form one body,to be known as the European Institute of
Golf Course Architects,was approved when the Presidents
of the three organisations, Peter Harradine (ESGA), Alain
Prat (AFAG)and Howard Swan (BIGCA), announced the future
amalgamation of their associations.

David Williams |
Final detailed discussions took place,
including,at the final British Institute AGM on the 1st April
2000, to ensure that the transition from three separate and
distinct organisations into one unified body could take place
smoothly in July 2000. The merger between Europe's three leading
golf course architects organisations was finally ratified
in London on Monday 3rd July 2000 at a meeting chaired by
David Williams, the first President of the unified Institute.
The British Institute of Golf Course Architects,the European
Society of Golf Course Architects and the Association Française
des Architectes de Golf merged under the title of the European
Institute of Golf Course Architects.

Celebrations on the day of the
merger |
The combined organisation will continue to
concentrate on a high quality of education, both of its
members and those wishing to enter the profession,to quote
the words of Alain Prat 'becomes a gathering place for our
shared experience, information, training and promotion for
the common goal, and that our knowledge in the fields of
design, construction, landscaping and the environment, becomes
the basis to enhance the quality of European golf architecture".
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