MARK MILLER'S BIOGRAPHY
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Hello, and welcome to the Miller
Design website. I’m Mark Miller, principal of
Miller Design. Please read below about the influences,
events and personal interests that led me into golf
course architecture.

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Growing up in Colorado, I was lucky to have two wonderful,
positive influences in my life that steered me in the direction
of a landscape architecture degree, and eventually to choosing
golf course architecture as a career.
My father has always had a knack for having fun, and a
great love for the outdoors. I was impressed by how his
passion for fishing, hunting or hiking intermingled with
his career in parks and recreation and parks design. It
seemed like the ideal way to go through life, and he taught
me that it is possible to make a career that revolved around
something I enjoyed.
In my early teens, my grandfather from Montana introduced
me to golf and I was instantly hooked. I’d spend summers
with my friends hanging out at the local courses. Eventually
I started playing new courses and watching PGA events on
TV. I was amazed at how Pebble Beach, and other courses,
were so creatively routed through stunning native environments,
with wildlife and breathtaking views. That was almost as
thrilling to me as crushing a perfect drive down the middle
of the fairway, (almost).
While studying Landscape Architecture at Texas Tech University,
I was fortunate enough to meet the talented and prolific
golf course architect, Jay Morrish. A senior class project
had taken us to Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas
where Mr. Morrish happened to be working at the time. He
met with our class, and I finagled my way into walking the
course with him the next day. It was my first introduction
into the art of designing golf courses from a true master.
My first opportunity came in the late 1980’s, working
with the brilliant design team of Robin Nelson and Rodney
Wright, located in Honolulu, Hawaii. Golf was booming during
this time and for the next ten years we worked on projects
in the Hawaiian Islands, the U.S. Mainland and many countries
throughout the Pacific Rim including China, Malaysia, Indonesia
and the Philippines. Nelson & Wright became known for
introducing local exotic culture into their golf course
designs, and I gained a magnificent amount of experience
working with this subsidiary of Belt Collins, a multidisciplinary
resort design firm.
I believe that the greatest golf courses in the world are
creatively routed, taking advantage of the existing resources
and features of the site, and built in harmony with the
natural environment. I adopted this philosophy early in
my career, but it became a great deal more apparent to me
when I took an extended trip to play and study some of the
great courses in Ireland. Walking the fairways of Royal
County Down, Ballybunion, Portmarnack, Lahinch and others,
was like filling in the missing pieces of a puzzle, or taking
a basic class that was missing from the college curriculum.
The origins of golf design and the experience of playing
on the links was no longer a mystery. Witnessing first hand
the scale of the natural dunes, and the physical and mental
battle posed by the winds, grasses and bunkering was a humbling
yet valuable lesson, and reaffirmed my beliefs.
I began doing business as Miller Design in Seattle, Washington
in 1999. I have now come full circle and find myself living
back home in Colorado. Although I have established Colorado
as headquarters for doing business, I continue to be affiliated
with my associate office in Seattle and travel there on
a regular basis to serve my Pacific Northwest clients. Designing
golf courses has been very rewarding over the years, but
I have found the business of developing working relationships
and friendships with clients and fellow consultants in this
business to be just as rewarding.
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