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Hills/Forrest
to Design 36-Hole Golf Course at Punta Lobos
in Todos Santos, Baja California Sur, Mexico

Arthur
Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates have been commissioned to
design 36 holes at Punta Lobos, a proposed development located 40
minutes north of Cabo San Lucas in Todos Santos on the Baja Peninsula.
Punta Lobos ("Sea Lion Point") will occupy more than 1,800
acres of seaside property owned by the Santa Ana Family, stewards
of this land since 1803. The two golf courses, residences, hotels
and marina associated with the project will be built on coastal
terrain made verdant by arroyos that channel fresh water from the
Sierra de La Laguna Mountains.
Punta Lobos will reflect the style, sensibility and natural attributes
of Todos Santos
("All Saints"), a town as famous for its climate as for
its colorful, bohemian culture. It will also reflect the values
of the Santa Ana Family, which has balanced commercial concerns
with environmental stewardship in this corner of Baja California
Sur for more than 150 years - from the sugar cane boom of the 19th
century, through the 1930s when it pioneered organic farming in
the region, to the rebirth of Todos Santos today as a vibrant cultural
center.
"Back in the mid-1800s, my grandfather took care of this land
and he left a lot of love in it," said family patriarch Jose
Santa Ana Pineda. "Punta Lobos will be a place where buyers
will become much more than another member of a luxury residential
community. They will become part of the two centuries of tradition
and heritage that built Todos Santos."
The Santa Ana Family has assembled an outstanding development team.
The firm of EDSA
will direct the sustainable land-planning effort, combining culture
and program elements with what the natural environment has to offer:
remarkable terrain, beautiful views, and an inherent relationship
with water. Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates, designers
of more than 180 golf courses worldwide, will lay out the two 18-hole
courses - the semi-private Rancho Santa Ana Golf Club and the private
Punta Lobos Club.
"There will be three luxury boutique hotels at Punta Lobos,"
says Punta Lobos director of sales Jesus Ruibal Santa Ana. "The
brands have not yet been determined, but elsewhere we have chosen
the very best: Hills/Forrest and EDSA, known for their work on signature
resorts such as Atlantis in the Bahamas, El Conquistador in Puerto
Rico, and numerous projects in Mexico. So the hotels must be up
to this standard. We are planning on between 650 and 850 real estate
units, but the final number will be determined by our architects
and land planners."
Rancho Santa Ana GC will be built on property east of Highway 19,
the coastal road that connects Todos Santos with Cabo San Lucas
to the south. Rancho Santa Ana will serve resort guests, while The
Punta Lobos Club, which will take shape west of the highway, will
be members-only. Arthur Hills and Hills/Forrest partner Brian Yoder
will collaborate closely on the design of both courses.
"The Santa Ana family has presented our firm with what I view
as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," explained Hills, who
will commit his personal attention to Punta Lobos. "I've been
in the course design business a long time, and I've worked on my
share of 'dream' sites. But Punta Lobos is something extraordinary.
We're going to create a masterpiece here."
Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates is widely acknowledged
as the leader in environmentally sensitive golf course design. The
firm's 1993 work at Collier's Reserve (Naples, Florida) resulted
in it being named America's first Certified Gold Signature Sanctuary,
the highest designation awarded by Audubon International and golf's
most prestigious environmental management program. In 2003, Hills/Forrest
also designed the first Certified Gold Signature Sanctuary outside
the United States, Oitavos Golfe in Cascais, Portugal. Both projects
are recognized around the world as case studies on how to build
golf courses in a manner sensitive to the environment.
Located on the Tropic of Cancer, Todos
Santos is routinely 10 degrees cooler and far more tropical
than towns to its north or south. Locals have a boast: You know
you've arrived in Todos Santos when things get green and look like
the Garden of Eden. Indeed, somewhere on the outskirts of town the
arid Baja scenery gives way, quite suddenly, to lush groves of palms,
mangos, avocados, and papayas. In March and February, the waters
off Punta Lobos are active mating areas for gray whales; year-round,
this is one of the Pacific Ocean's premier game-fishing havens.
Todos Santos has also cultivated the well-earned reputation as a refuge for serious artists: fine, folk and culinary. With a large collection of galleries and restaurants, many find it reminiscent of Carmel, Calif., in the 1950s. Todos Santos was recently named by the Mexican Government as Baja's first Pueblos Magicos, or "Magic Town," a designation bestowed only on communities possessing a singular historical, cultural and architectural significance. Todos Santos is one of just 20 Pueblos Magicos in all of Mexico.
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