Lakeview Golf Club

Lakeview Golf Club, a scenic comfortable venue for the public to play golf, is located on the east side of Harrisonburg, Virginia. It was established in 1962 as a farm converted into a nine-hole course, and other courses were added over the years until it reached 36 holes in 2002. Several architects were involved in the various courses, but there's a cohesiveness in the layout, enriched by the impressive scenery of the Shenandoah Valley — Alleghenies to the west, Blue Ridge to the east, and the ever-present Massanutten Mountain overlooking the course.
 
The oldest nine-hole course is the Spring Nine (originally the West Nine), which features a mix of wide-open and tree-lined holes, and a spring creek winding through the layout. Most matches on this side will be determined in the wooded stretch of holes 6 through 8, a solid par-3, a tight par-4, and then a risk/reward par-5. The best view on the course is from #5 tee box which looks back over the clubhouse and the Blue Ridge Mountains.
 
The Lake Nine was added in 1967, and starts by the old barn across Shen Lake Drive. Perhaps the most forgiving layout on the property, the reachable 5-pars and the shorter 4-pars open the door to low scores. The 3-pars have a way of stealing back a shot or two, though — and #9 can be a stern test with a match on the line; a crooked lie in the fairway with the pin behind the greenside pond often makes for a dramatic finish. The best view on this side is also the #5 tee box, but the vista from this angle includes Lake Shenandoah and the distant Alleghenies at the West Virginia state line.
 
The more enclosed feel of the tree-lined Peak Nine (1976) does not lend itself to as many inspiring views, but will test the accuracy of any golfer. The signature hole is the par-4 7th, and uphill dog-leg right that stretches out to as much as 453 yards. If the wind is blowing (as it almost always seems to do), golfers struggle to earn a clear approach to the green, and par is a brilliant score. Traditionally the tighter holes of the Peak would be followed by a respite on the Lake Nine.
 
The Mountain Nine (2002) offers a little more architectural flair, more length, and a few more challenges than the three older courses. This layout starts and finishes with shorter 4-pars, and though it winds through a housing development it also offers a stunning look across the Valley from Massanutten Peak out towards Skyline Drive. The par-3 4th hole shares this view; it stretches over 200 yards and the predominant wind draws a ball toward the water on the left. The view from the upper level of the split fairway on #7 is amazing. The Mountain Nine is certainly the best test of a golfers skill of the courses at Lakeview.
 
Lakeview Golf Club is open to public play, but also offers memberships. It has a tradition of affordability, and a rustic charm that carries back almost 50 years to its roots as a local farm. Despite its affordability, though, it is known for quality maintenance of the grounds and the outstanding natural scenery — all of which makes it the flagship of golf courses in the central Shenandoah Valley.
 
Lakeview Golf Club has been home for John Rogers for almost 20 years, first as a college student and a member of the Club. He started working there in 1995 and has been there ever since, becoming the Director of Instruction in 2009.
 
For more information on Lakeview Golf Club, please check out its website. And read John's 2005 Golf Things Considered column about the course below.

Praising Lakeview

January 19, 2005

In the 1980s the economy boomed with real estate speculation, and developers built golf courses all over the place. In the 90s, the dot-coms were on fire and developers built golf courses all over the place. Those days of prosperity were celebrated with upscale daily-fee golf courses — open to the public, at least to people who are willing and able to pay $50-$100 to play golf. But in the days since 9/11, the stock market seems to be looking over its shoulder, and the golf industry has gotten a little soft. In times like this it’s a good old, rural, inexpensive, take a pull cart, and grab a hot dog at the turn type of golf that appeals to people. Welcome to Lakeview Golf Course.

I recently played Stonewall Golf Club outside of Gainesville, Virginia, which is one of those high-end courses. At Stonewall you take a cart equipped with GPS that tells you how far you are from the pin, play eighteen scenic and well-designed holes (some of which share Lake Manassas with the Robert TrentJones Course), admire a few $800,000 homes along the way, have your clubs cleaned after the round, and finally go into The Brass Cannon to have a cold beverage and a look at whatever game is appearing on the big screen. It makes for an enjoyable experience.

The normal fees to be pampered at Stonewall are somewhere around $110, though they have a weekday, winter, twilight price of $40, which matches the peak rate at Lakeview.

Granted, when you arrive at Lakeview, if you wait in the parking lot for someone to pick up your bag, you’re going to miss your tee time (and if someone does come and pick up your bag, be prepared to give a physical description later). We hit from mats, not turf, at the driving range. The carts won’t exactly pass a white glove test, don’t have global positioning, but they do beep if you go in reverse. The clubhouse is a little cramped, and starting to show some wear and tear after almost 25 years. And don’t expect baked brie and wine in the concessions area.

But Lakeview offers 36 holes of enjoyable golf, with beautiful Shenandoah scenery, and what it lacks in amenities it makes up for in old fashioned, no nonsense, daily-fee golf. The course is almost always in good condition. And you can walk all 36 holes, with a sandwich and soft drink in between rounds, for less than $30.

Lakeview has come a long way since the J. Fred Simms Farm was turned into a nine-hole course in 1963. The current owners, Lakeview Development Corporation, took over in 1964, adding a second nine by 1967. In those days a converted chicken coop served as the pro shop, and the safe was a golf bag they kept in club storage.

There were no golf carts back then. Dave Gooden, now the Head Pro, remembers pulling dandelions out of the greens with a pocketknife to work off his membership as a kid. It was a simple, blue-collar type of place.

Bill Jenkins, a retired Cadillac salesman from Washington D.C., worked in the chicken coop and exemplified the no-frills approach to service. When someone called to ask what the weather was like, Jenkins replied, “Look out your *!#*! window.” There’s no repeating what he said when someone called to ask, “What day do you have the Wednesday Special?”

Hank Dorman, who has been President of Lakeview for 17 of the last 20 years, bought his share of the golf course for $1,036. One of the original investors (who bought the share for $1,000) decided there was no future for Lakeview after there were only 9,000 rounds played the first year. Now, having survived the last 40 years, they regularly host over 50,000 rounds per season. Good luck trying to get a share of stock these days.

Since the 1960s Lakeview has matured. Eventually there were golf carts, irrigation, and a real pro shop. In 1976 they added another nine holes. The final nine was opened in 2002, and these days the staff is much friendlier (if I do say so myself).

Times have changed in the Shenandoah Valley as well. While it’s not quite Northern Virginia, the houses being built around the newest course go for about $400,000. Farming is not the only business around here any more. There are three more golf courses available to the public in the Harrisonburg area now. But despite it all, Lakeview remains the best buy and most enjoyable place to play. It still has a simple, rustic charm.

Lakeview will never host a pro tour event. It could use a little touch-up and a few more bunkers here and there. There is no shoe shining. No 15,000 square foot clubhouse. No impressive practice facilities. There is nothing fancy about Lakeview.

But the course has prospered for 40 years, through strong economic times and weak economic times, by applying a fairly simple concept: provide a good product at a low price. Golfers don’t call it “upscale”, they don’t call it “world-class”, but they do call it for tee times. That’s because Lakeview exposes what golf was, is, and probably will be for a long time to come — a sport that appeals to a lot of people when it’s affordable to a lot of people.