Las Vegas Review-Journal

By the numbers

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■ 7,042: inyards

■ 130: Acreage of the golf course

■ 70: Par score

■ 500: Dollars, the cost of a round of golf

■ 800,000: Cubic yards of earth moved to build the course

■ 100,000: New shrubs installed when built

■ 1,200: Trees salvaged and relocated from the original Desert Inn Golf Club, some more than 50 years old and 60 feet tall ■ 4,600: Linear feet of streams and marshlands on the course using natural groundwate­r

■ 37: Height in feet of the waterfall at the 18th green. A golf cart path is carved into the rock behind the waterfall

Wynn has begun preliminar­y design work on the $1.5 billion project that will feature a 38-acre lagoon surrounded by a mile-long boardwalk and beach.

Pre-constructi­on work is expected to begin as early as Jan. 3, with heavy equipment expected in by March or April. The project will include a 47-story, 1,500-room hotel and a convention center with indoor and outdoor access. A Carnivale theme is envisioned, and Wynn has described a nightly parade of floats on the lagoon, fireworks, ziplines, a carousel, and a bumper-car attraction with cars that erupt with a flash of LED lights with each collision.

Employees on the course

It’s anticipate­d to be a sensory display that will be the exact opposite of the solitude of the finely manicured golf course where a threesome of Wynn employees began a round Friday morning. Mike Barrett,

PUTT

George Fonte and Henry Lee were first on the course that day.

The course, designed by Wynn and noted golf course architect Tom Fazio, officially closed to the public Sunday, but Wynn offered to make it available to employees for six days. Employees paid $150 for a round, with all the money going to the Wynn Employee Foundation. Wynn offered to match whatever money was raised in greens fees. The public paid $500 a round to play.

The Wynn Employee Foundation was created to support employee contributi­ons to charitable causes.

In 2016, Wynn employees contribute­d $390,400 to 113 local organizati­ons and donated 20,000 hours of community service through the foundation.

The Wynn Community Grant Fund, a fund designed to award money to local nonprofits, raised an additional $82,400 that was dispersed at the direction of members of an employee advisory board.

Volunteers for charity

Volunteer time has been spent building gardens at local elementary schools, handing out groceries to families, donating blood to those in need, visiting senior centers and reading to children.

Nicole Parry, vice president of special events at Wynn Resorts Ltd., said tee times were carved out to enable 300 employee rounds. As of Friday, about 100 had played or set tee times, with high winds, cold weather and the busy holiday season leading to some cancellati­ons earlier in the week.

“Those 100 employees have been very enthusiast­ic about the opportunit­y,” Parry said. “They love the golf course. The golf course is in incredible shape, and they’ve come back and sent incredible emails and love the experience.”

The course that would become the Wynn Country Club was opened by gangster Moe Dalitz in 1952 as the Desert Inn Golf Club. For years, the course hosted three PGA Tour events, including the PGA Tour Tournament of Champions from 1953 through 1966, attracting the likes of Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus.

Celebrity rounds

Celebritie­s performing at the Desert Inn also made their way to the course. Memories of rounds played by Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and other big names of the era are preserved in photograph­s that hang throughout the Wynn Country Club.

The Desert Inn was built by

Wilbur Clark, and a bridge named for him crosses one of the course’s streams on the 17th fairway. The Wilbur Clark Bridge will be relocated to the Fazio-designed Discovery course at The Summit Club in Summerlin.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

 ?? Joel Angel Juarez ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto The Wynn Country Club opened in 1952 as the Desert Inn Golf Club and used to host PGA Tour events.
Joel Angel Juarez Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto The Wynn Country Club opened in 1952 as the Desert Inn Golf Club and used to host PGA Tour events.

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