Getting Stronger Over Time with Bunker Liners by Capillary

For almost any product, there is an environment that provides its toughest test. If you’re making extreme winter clothing, and you get asked to supply your gear to McMurdo Station, the largest settlement in Antarctica, you’ll know it is going to get the best possible test. Similarly, if you sell bunker liners and you get asked to supply The Preserve GC, in Vancleave in southern Mississippi.

Designed by Jerry Pate and opened in 2005, The Preserve is attached to the Palace Casino Resort in nearby Biloxi. According to director of operations Stephen Miles, the course does 13,000 rounds in an average year, though the post-Covid golf boom means 2021 has been significantly busier. And, let us not beat about the bush: this part of the Gulf coast is the wettest location in the whole of the continental United States, averaging almost 70 inches (1780mm) of rain a year. And 2021 has been wetter still than that: club meteorologist Jeremy Steven reports that the figure for this year is very close to 100 inches (2,540mm).

Fortunately for Miles and his team, back in 2014, The Preserve chose to rebuild its bunkers and line them with Capillary Bunkers technology. “Nine years after opening is not a long time to have to renovate, but the infrastructure in the original build of the course was simply not up to coping with our weather,” he says. “The bunkers were originally lined with fabric, but it was wearing out, and we needed a more resilient solution. I knew that concrete had the tendency to get stronger over time, and Capillary Bunkers was less restrictive in the conditions needed for installation than its closest rival. I was confident at the time that we had made the right choice and installed a product that would stand the test of time. And time has proved we made the right choice!”

“We have not had to repair our bunkers at all, and, incredibly, the original sand is still in them,” Miles says. “Since 2014, I have bought one truckload of sand, and that was for the bunker in our chipping green – which gets blasted out by players. Our bunkers have flashed sand faces, but our minimal washout issues only occur where the water actually flows into the bunkers. When we get a big rain – and eight to ten inches of rain is not uncommon – we have to wait for the drainage infrastructure underneath the bunkers to catch up with the bunkers’ ability to move water. But it always does, and then the crew can prepare the bunkers for play again.”

At the core of our solution, Capillary Bunkers is a patented and engineered polymer-based concrete. It is the only building material that can rapidly drain water while also moving water up. Capillary Bunkers’ cutting-edge, patented technology helps you control water in any climate, season, and soil type, providing better, more consistent playing experiences while reducing costs. http://www.capillaryconcrete.com

Golf Course Trades

Recent Posts

King’s North at Myrtle Beach National to Begin Stage 2 of Ambitious Renovation Project

King’s North at Myrtle Beach National closed its back nine on May 26, 2025, as…

2 days ago

John Deere renews commitment to hometown John Deere Classic through 2030

– The PGA TOUR, Deere & Company (NYSE: DE) and the Quad Cities Golf Classic…

3 days ago

Steel Green Manufacturing Adds Razor Tracking on Its Turf Equipment For GPS Fleet Coordination

Steel Green Manufacturing has added Razor Tracking GPS Fleet Coordination to all its new 2025…

4 days ago

Jeremy’s Creek Golf Course Joins Maxim Golf Portfolio, Boosting Midwest Club Network

Jeremy’s Creek Golf Course, located in Lamar, Missouri, is the latest Club to join Maxim…

6 days ago

Pebble Beach Golf Links to pursue first-in-nation Clean Water Act permit

Pebble Beach Company, California Coastkeeper Alliance, The Otter Project, and Monterey Waterkeeper announce a historic…

1 week ago

The Top 5 Things to Know if You’re New to Golf Course Pond Management

If you’re a golf course manager or superintendent suddenly responsible for maintaining course ponds, you…

1 week ago