Customers at the Chelsea Piers in Manhattan hit more than 17 million balls every year.
A big summertime storm has rolled into Manhattan – a world-is-ending type, with brilliant lightning flashes, window-rattling thunder and buckets of hard rain. Step outside and you’ll be drenched in an instant, even with an umbrella. Hoping to hail a taxi? Ha. Not a chance. Yet the Chelsea Piers range is packed, including a Girls’ Night Out event that’s at capacity with 70 women. They’re whacking balls from covered stalls out onto the range and getting pointers from a couple of roaming professionals, while upstairs in a banquet room they’re enjoying drinks and hors d’oeuvres and seeing who can hit the longest drive on a simulator. It’s just another Monday night at Chelsea Piers, a practice range that will not be slowed by something as trivial as terrible weather.
Okay, if you arrive in the middle of a snowstorm, you probably won’t wait long for one of its 52 stalls. But the Golf Club at Chelsea Piers is otherwise nearly always busy. It says that roughly 350 000 customers roll up to its entrance along Manhattan’s 11th Avenue every year, hitting more than 17 million balls and absorbing more than 16 500 hours of golf instruction.
To put those numbers in some context, consider that the Golf Range Association of America celebrates the 50 best “standalone” ranges annually. These leading ranges average less than half of Chelsea Piers’ volume. “Chelsea Piers blows everybody else away,” says Patrick Cherry, the range association’s general manager. “Nobody else even comes close.”
This story is from the October 2017 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.
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This story is from the October 2017 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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