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Why are they closing the LSU golf course?
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:05 pm
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:05 pm
This sucks.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:06 pm to loogaroo
They need the money to pay our pro players?
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:06 pm to loogaroo
quote:
This sucks.
dem cows gots to eat, baw
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:08 pm to loogaroo
You should be able to afford a country club. If not, you are a poor and need to learn basketball. Golf is for the elite and talented, that’s why the team partnered with University Club Plantation.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:09 pm to loogaroo
“Golf course”….. probably gonna be the new site for the arena when it finally comes
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:12 pm to jizzle6609
quote:
Maintenance costs
Really?
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:16 pm to PotatoChip
quote:
probably gonna be the new site for the arena when it finally comes
New cultural tailgating area equipped with an empty parking lot for doing donuts with your Challenger.
quote:
The golf course closure comes as developers have pinpointed the land as the location for the proposed LSU Arena, which would be built on the corner of Nicholson and Gourrier. The long-discussed arena would serve as a live-entertainment venue and sports arena.
From July of last year:
quote:
BATON ROUGE - Well-known Baton Rouge developer John Engquist is passionate about the LSU arena coming to fruition.
"I've never seen a development project that is as important to the future of Baton Rouge as this arena project is. It's so much more than an area. It's going to catalyze development on campus and off campus. This is a game changer for Baton Rouge," he said.
As the chair of the Tiger Athletic Foundation committee that helped pick the developer for the project, he knows the ins and outs of the project.
The long-discussed arena will be built near the corner of Nicholson Drive and Gourrier Avenue on the current LSU Golf Course.
Engquist said not only will there be a state-of-the-art entertainment venue in Baton Rouge — the entire project also includes entertainment and research districts, hotels, a new sports medicine facility from Our Lady of the Lake, and a revitalization of the River Center into a convention hub.
Officials have maintained both the PMAC and the River Center cannot be turned into the arena they envision.
"It's going to save a bunch of money because the city's not going to have to renovate the River Center," Engquist said. "You can go in there and spend $200 - $250 million on that River Center and still have an uncompetitive venue. It would be a mediocre venue."
Since it's announcement last year, there have been a lot of questions swirling about how the now projected $400 million project will be paid for. The original proposal was for $340 million.
"This arena is not costing LSU anything," Engquist said. "The developer is funding this arena."
Enqquist says though the build will be privately funded, the developers will essentially get their return on investment from the future revenue generated in the Economic Development District that surrounds it.
"We have put in place an EDD on LSU's campus," Engquist said. "We're in the process of putting together a sub-district there. Each of those entities will provide 1 cent to the developer and then at the point in time this gets signed up and it's real, then they'll ask the city for 2 cents."
But Engquist said it won't be taking any money from the city-parish.
"No, because there's nothing there," Engquist said. "There's a golf course that generates zero revenue, zero taxes, so there's nothing there. When you build the new arena, that will self-generate the revenue and these taxes."
Currently, there is no official agreement in place yet between TAF and the developer Oak View Group.
As we reported earlier this month, Oak View Group's former CEO was indicted for rigging bids to build the Moody Center in Austin, which is essentially the blueprint for LSU's arena. He has since stepped down.
https://www.wbrz.com/news/who-will-pay-for-the-400m-lsu-arena-project-expert-engquist-explains/
This post was edited on 3/23/26 at 3:23 pm
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:18 pm to loogaroo
quote:
Really?
Is the course popular? Do you think it operates in the black?
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:23 pm to loogaroo
they're turning it into a disc golf course
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:25 pm to loogaroo
Santa Maria and Webb are the only courses in BR that actually make any money.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:26 pm to loogaroo
Learn how to play a real sport, buddy.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:33 pm to Shexter
The traffic will be a AMAZING when that is built 
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:34 pm to Shexter
The whole project is a shady shitshow of typical local politicians and friends looking for profit. Corruption will continue.
quote:
The legal foundation for the project rests on Act 203 of 2023 Regular Session (Senate Bill 70) by former Senator Cleo Fields (D 1/10), which created the LSU Economic Development District (LSUEDD). The same guy who authored this EDD just slithered his way into the U.S. House through a snake-shaped district created just for him, thanks to some shady political deals. The statute’s boundaries sweep broadly around the LSU campus — from City Park and University Gardens on the north to Brightside Lane on the south, and from Stanford Avenue and Nicholson Drive on the east to the parish line on the west.
quote:
Crucially, the law stipulates that no residential tracts may be included within the LSUEDD, except for hotels, motels, and inns. This was not a drafting accident. By excluding residential parcels, this Legislative creature was intended to exclude voters. Having no citizens inside the district allows them to evade Louisiana Constitutional provisions that guarantee that voters must approve all new taxes. Without voters, Louisiana courts have ruled that the constitutional prohibition doesn’t apply; new taxes can be enacted by ordinance.
quote:
To make the LSU arena possible, LSU would have to enter into a long-term ground lease with the developer. Such agreements typically run 50 to 100 years, effectively removing the property from LSU’s control for the better part of a century. Once leased, the university loses the ability to use, repurpose, or reclaim the land for academic, recreational, or research needs.
In other words, the LSU arena is not only a $400 million bet on private development but also a generational surrender of public land on Louisiana’s top university campus. The community isn’t just giving up tax revenue — it’s giving up land-use flexibility for a century, binding future LSU students, Baton Rouge residents, and area shoppers to decisions made in secrecy.
https://www.newlouisiana.org/30m-for-them-0-for-lsu-the-shady-lsu-arena-deal/
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:35 pm to loogaroo
To get it ready for the Fred's Invitational
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:38 pm to loogaroo
Learned how to play golf on that course, but 9 of the holes were on the other side of Nicholson at that time. I only remember hitting a few cars 
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:39 pm to loogaroo
all I've ever read on the golf board concerning the LSU course is how much it sucks and how run down/neglected it is. Seems like the University decided they were done with it a long time ago.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:40 pm to loogaroo
Used to love playing the old chip and putt there when I was a student way back in the day...
RIP
RIP
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:42 pm to loogaroo
quote:
Really?
It costs a fortune to keep a golf course in decent shape, its takes a mint to keep one mint.
Posted on 3/23/26 at 3:46 pm to fallguy_1978
quote:
Learned how to play golf on that course, but 9 of the holes were on the other side of Nicholson at that time. I only remember hitting a few cars
yep, and it was a cow pasture back then, we'd go swimming for golf balls in the water hazards as it was getting dark, take the balls back to the apt., wash them in the bathtub, then have a golf ball lottery pick, got reunited with many of my golf balls
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