PGA of America completes new headquarters at burgeoning 600-acre campus in Frisco, Texas

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Just a year after the PGA Tour unveiled its new, Foster + Partners–designed global base at TPC Sawgrass outside of Jacksonville, the PGA of America has unveiled its new home, designed by Houston-headquartered multidisciplinary firm Page, 30 miles north of Dallas in the city of Frisco.

The completion of the $33.5 million new organizational headquarters building is situated on the larger 600-acre PGA Frisco campus and marks a new chapter for the 106-year-old PGA of America, which was previously, like the PGA Tour, headquartered in the alligator-infested golf nirvana known as the Sunshine State—in Palm Beach Gardens, to be exact. PGA of America, now the first major international sports organization to be based in Texas, first announced its departure from Florida in 2018. (Although once part of the same larger organization, PGA Tour spun off from the PGA of America in the late 1960s and operates as a wholly separate organization dedicated to organizing pro golf tournaments for men; PGA of America is the entity that sets the standards for and certifies golf professionals—not professional golfers—such as club directors, instructors, and on.)

Targeting LEED Silver certification, the new 106,600-square-foot PGA of America headquarters complex in Frisco is described by Page as “an open and welcoming environment that celebrates golf and supports its development as a popular sport.” Major elements of the headquarters include open and private workspaces accommodating 150 corporate employees, seminar and meetings rooms, a professional development center, communal areas including a large social staircase, a fitness facility, and an event venue on the top floor of the building with access to a large outdoor terrace. Finally, the building features a sprawling, state-of-the-art indoor training center featuring chipping and putting areas, hitting bays with operable walls, and driving range simulators. The stacked nature of the four-level structure allows for spacious, south-facing terraces on the upper levels with optimized view of the campus’s marquee attractions: the golf courses.

an indoor putting range at a golf training center
The new PGA headquarters includes an expansive indoor training center for golf professionals. (Courtesy Page)

Describing the layout of the project as one that will provide the PGA with a “flexible framework with which to engage with the local community, as well as with visitors from across the world,” Ricardo Muñoz, an associate principal at Page who served as lead design architect on the project, in a statement,” went on to describe interior highlights of the building in greater detail:

“From the moment that you walk into the Home of the PGA, you are immediately welcomed by a double-volume lobby illuminated by a custom fabricated light fixture suspended from above. The gentle curves found in this fixture represent the sinuous lines found throughout a golf course’s topography. A 28-foot-high wood feature stands tall behind the reception desk and subtly showcases the signature holes on the courses just a few steps away. But perhaps one of the most striking elements you experience in the lobby is the view of the driving range beyond, framed by dark metal. From the very beginning, the design team wanted the building to have a sense of porosity in terms of creating indoor/outdoor experiences by showcasing the beautiful landscape beyond. The large expanses of shaded glass, as well as the covered terraces and operable window-walls, help provide this connection to the outdoors.”

Clad in stucco, glass, and locally sourced Leuders limestone, the building—transparent, yet strategically designed to shield its interiors from the blazing hot North Texas sun—is a work of Lone Star State regional modernism through-and-through.

“The project’s architectural response to its context and program was driven by regional environmental strategies, as well as from inspiration of the local natural landscape,” elaborated Muñoz. “Deep overhangs, shading devices and trellises are implemented much in the same manner as one would find in structures across Texas over the centuries. Terraces facing the golf courses are well-shaded and meant to take advantage of natural breezes. The bent bar form and the terracing of each floor recall the natural earth and rock formations found in the immediate context.”

exterior of ilmestone-clad golf hq
PGA of America sheds its Floridian roots for a new HQ built with regional materials and designed to respond to the North Texas climate. (Courtesy Page)

Joining Muñoz and the larger team from Page, which also helmed the project’s interior design, branding, wayfinding, and programming aspects, were general contractor Adolfson & Peterson Construction, construction manager Cushman Wakefield, and a consultant team that included Talley Associates (landscape architect), L.A. Fuess Partners (structural engineer), Schmidt-Stacy (MEP engineer), Brockette Davis Drake (civil engineer), and others.

Construction first kicked off at the 6.2-acre project site, located in the northwest corner of the larger PGA Frisco campus, in September 2020. Adjacent to the headquarters building is an event garden, driving range, 10-hole short course, and below-grade parking structure with 140 spaces; there is a woefully small amount of electric vehicle parking at the site as well as some bicycle parking.

As mentioned, the building is pending LEED Silver certification with sustainability strategies, inside and out, including: water-efficient fixtures, daylight harvesting, LED lighting and occupancy controls, efficient HVAC systems, drought-tolerant landscaping, and the use of healthy, low-emitting building materials. “Careful attention was paid to the building’s placement and its orientation to maximize the availability of natural light while minimizing solar gain,” Page explained in its project overview. “The team implemented solar analysis studies to determine overhang depths, window locations and trellis placements.”

Seventy-five percent of all construction waste generated during the project was reused or recycled.

As for the larger PGA Frisco campus, the headquarters building is just one anchoring element of North Texas’s very own links Shangri-La, which was born from a private-public partnership between the PGA of America, Omni Hotels & Resorts, the City of Frisco, and the Frisco Independent School District. Also located on the massive campus are the two previously mentioned 18-hole courses, designed by Gil Hanse and Beau Welling as part of Fields Ranch at PGA Frisco; the 510-room Omni PGA Frisco Resort; a clubhouse and performance center; a 30-acre practice facility; headquarters of the Northern Section PGA; several miles of public hiking and cycling trails, and a “golf-centered entertainment” zone called the PGA District.

The rest of the $520 million PGA Frisco development is slated to open next year. Dubbed by PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh as the “Silicon Valley of golf,” the development is expected to generate $2.5 billion in economic impact over the next two decades.

The 600-acre PGA Frisco campus—billed by the organization as the largest development currently under construction in North America—is part of an even larger mixed-use Dallas Metroplex development catering to golf aficionados that spans 2,500 acres.

For those looking to truly live the PGA life, Florida it would seem, is no longer, the spot … get thee to Frisco.



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