Trinity Forest Golf Club looks like an idyllic patch of linksland that somehow got dropped into the middle of a secluded forest. It’s hard to believe that the golf course was actually built on an illegal landfill just a few minutes from downtown Dallas. The transformation that took place there is not only surprising, it’s an inspiring example of how golf can be a vehicle for positive change. Developing the course rehabilitated a degraded landscape, brought resources into an underserved community, and created opportunities for people to connect and have their lives shaped for the better by the game we love – but it took a lot of vision, commitment and hard work to go from landfill to the host course of this year’s U.S. Junior Amateur.
When founder and club president Jonas Woods first toured the site, it looked to him like a rolling meadow that was perfect for golf. He didn’t realize that piles of construction debris sat just beneath the surface. “The property was covered in tall grasses and surrounded by this magnificent forest,” said Woods. “I thought it had the potential to be a beautiful, very links-like golf course. But if you really looked closely, every now and again you’d see an artifact of what the site really was, a tire poking out of the ground or something and you’d wonder where that came from.”