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Nicklaus' gift (PBP) 11-17-06DAMON HIGGINS/Staff Photographer North Palm Beach Country Club has more elevation changes than most area courses. Jack Nicklaus' design uses them to challenge golfers. Nicklaus gifti. A course _utialieover, A redesigned North Palm Beach Country Club — at a cost of $1— reopens today. By CRAIG DOLCH Palm Beach Post Staff Writer NORTH PALM BEACH — It's still at the same location and it's still 18 holes of golf, but few players will recognize North Palm Beach Country Club when it reopens today after a major redesign by neighbor Jack Nicklaus. The public course has been trans- formed in seven months from a basic, driver -wedge layout to one that will test the skilled players while still allowing high -handicappers to enjoy their round. Nobody can say Nicklaus didn't give them their moneys worth. "I charged them one dollar for the design fee," said Nicklaus, who gave the same bargain to Lost Tree Village (where his family lives) and Ohio State University (where he went to school) . When Village of North Palm Beach officials started their search for an ar- chitect, few thought it would be the golf- ing legend who lives about a mile away but has never played the course. Village council member Ed Eissey asked Nick- laus icklaus almost as an afterthought. "He said that I probably wouldn't be interested, and I told him, `Don't be id. "I've lived here and silly,"' Nicklaus sa seen that piece of property for. 35 years. It's a fantastic piece of property. I know that property should have a golf cnQarse the village would be proud of." Nicklaus changed the routing of the holes and stretched the layout from 6,300 yards as a par -72 to a par -71 that can play at 7,100. while Nicklaus wanted to make the course more appealing to a quality player, he didn't want to make it too dif- ficult ifficult for many of the older residents. To that end, he tried to leave the fair- ways more open in the 220 -yard range to lower the degree of difficulty. The farther someone hits it, the more trouble is brought into play. "Jack did exactly what he said he was going to do," said David Norris, North Palm Beach's mayor and a 5 -handicapper who was among 30 people who played the course Wednesday. "If you're looking for a challenge, moving to the back tees, will give you that. But the people who played the front and middle tees said it was a lot of fun." Nicklaus tried to take more advan- tage of the property's elevation change something that is rare in Florida. "There's more than 30 feet of eleva- tion change," he said of the course. "It's probably on the same dune structure that runs through Seminole (Golf Club, also in North Palm Beach) ." Nicklaus said his company also found sand on the property that is the best it has tested in Florida in terms of avoid- ing buried lies in bunkers. But he said putting will be more difficult because he changed the contour of the greens to take advantage of the elevation changes. "They have gone from flat greens to greens that fit the property," he said. The hardest part about playing North Palm may be getting a tee time (and dai- ly greens fees have risen considerably). Norris said interest was so high that the 500 yearly memberships sold out before they could be offered to any nonresi- dents who weren't already members. (Dcraig_dolch@pbpost.com