Loading...
NPCC gets a new look (PBP) 2-23-2000The Palm Beach Post Accession # Date: Z m Z3 -Zorx) N.orthalm country club gets new l TAYLOR JONES/Staff Photographer Golfers Thomas Svanstedt (left) and Dag Nor- golf at the North Palm Beach Country Club on denskjold of Palm Beach Gardens return to their U.S. 1. The newly renovated clubhouse is in the cart after playing a hole during a recent round of background. By Thomas R. Collins Palm Beach Post Staff Writer NORTH PALM BEACH If there's one thing that the people in charge of the North Palm Beach Country Club especially like to see, it's customers walk- ing into the dining room wearing suits. It means businesses are dis- cussing their affairs and trying to win clients there. And when that happens, it reinforces what club officials have already con- cluded: The clubhouse is back. Village council and club administrator Ron Albert should hope so. During a six-month overhaul that finished last month and will be celebrated with a grand opening ceremony on Friday, the village poured about $900,000 into the club- house. , The project included expanding and refurbishing almost everything in sight: the dining room, the locker rooms, the hallways. The effect is the equivalent of a daytime talk show makeover. Though the clubhouse, which was opened in 1963, has had small touch-ups and repairs done over the years, this is the first major effort at improving it, Albert said. Still to come are the completion of a new snack bar next to the pool and an addi- tional $100,000 worth of land- scaping along the outskirts of the club along U.S. 1 from Yacht Club Drive on south, he said. He can barely contain his grins of satisfaction as he points out the changes. "Everything's new," Albert said proudly. The building has a new roof. The main entrance now has a fountain next to it. The eating area near the bar has new furni- ture, including tables with the North Palm Beach sailor -wheel seal like those that mark the entrances to the village. The ........... PGA Blvd. IJAP , MARTIN: C( aLM BEACH CO. BROWARD 1/2 mite ;b b Country'r Club: Dr. 2:. .::..i .. ... :::::..:: . rr .. . ,. 1�1)/ 0. i � U N° Blvd. Northlake ............................................ .......... HEATHER KONG/Staff Artist plates have the seal on them, too. The lobby has been given a lighter, whiter motif. "Before, it was black slate floors," Albert said. "It was very dingy -looking." Then there's the crown jewel: the new dining room. The win- dows have been extended to the floor to let more sun in and a wall has been torn down to give the room about 25 percent more space. On a recent Monday, the bar was so crowded there was barely a seat to spare. "Before you could come in and you could easily get a chair up there," Albert said. For years the country club was "a real focal point where businessmen would have power lunches, then a trailing off of that clientele happened as the club's conditions deteriorated. The businessmen are returning, Albert said. "Now, we have a restaurant -that_is actually bringing the busi- nesses back, in here," he said. "It's nice to see." The idea to do the work first was proposed by Councilman David Norris about three years ago, and pushed when Council- man Joe Tringali listed club revi- talization as one of his campaign planks in 1998. The clubhouse had an aged, musty smell, Norris said. "It was just the overall situa- tion, that the club hadn't been really renovated for 30 years and it was just really in a very run- down state, didn't smell good and it wasn't something that was very attractive," he said. "Subse- quently, no one came." Times have changed. "It's absolutely smashing," said club member Cal Scarponi, who spends her summers in New Hampshire. "Now, it's in TAYLOR JONES/Staff Photographer The Forth Palm Beech Country Club's new dining room windows which give diners a better view of golfers on green from the comfor full swing." Long-time member and vil- lage resident Anne Medeiros said the renovation money, which came from club -generated profits, was well spent. "It's already been in escrow for years to do this," she said. "It's long overdue." Village officials are now wait Continued on Page 23 t of their dining Official h 9 will pull 1 Continued from Page I ing to see whether the changes translate into profit. The restau- rant's sales never had a deficit before the changes, Albert said, but Tringali said the "black wasn't all that black." Albert said it's too early to gauge the renova- tions' effects. Most of all, he'd love to see more lucrative memberships and hopes golfers and tennis players who formerly paid only daily fees will become yearly members. The club now has 532 golfing members, 183 tennis members, and 252 pool members. Albert said he'd like to see each of those categories increase by between 50 and 100 members in has larger the putting table. the next year. The main goal isn't financial, Tringali said. "I think that there's an intan- gible goal, there's an intangible profit that's much more than money," he said. "And that to me is the sense of community which North Palm Beach should have, once had. I lived here back in the `70s. ... That's where you took your kids on Saturdays to the pool. That was to a great extent the center of community life." Boom or no boom, Albert said, the members are having a good time. "It's just nice to hear people say, `wow, what a difference. This place looks great.'" thomas—collins@pbpost.com