Rees Jones, Inc.
www.reesjonesinc.com
Rees Jones, Inc. was founded in 1974 and is headquartered in Montclair, New Jersey. The company customizes the design and supervises the construction of new layouts for private, resort, real estate development, municipal and county golf courses. They also redesign and modernize existing courses.
Rees Jones, son of Robert Trent Jones Senior says: “At Rees Jones, Inc., we work to create courses that are fair, challenging, continually interesting to play, and visually exciting. We get a feel for the land, we listen to the client, and we build a course that we believe has integrity and lasting value.”
Some of Rees Jones’s Inc. original designs include the Andalusia Country Club at La Quinta California, the Bear Creek Golf Club at Hilton Head Island (SC), the Nantucket Golf Club. Some of his redesigns include Mauna Kea Golf Course in Hawaii, Lyford Cay Club in Nassau and the Breakers Rees Jones Course at West Palm Beach.
Aman Resorts
www.amanresorts.com
Amanresorts owns and manages 23 small luxury resorts worldwide. Each Aman resort is singularly unique but all offer an experience for guests that is intimate and discreet, while providing the highest level of service. Certain elements characterize all Aman resorts – a beautiful natural location, outstanding facilities, exceptional service and a small number of rooms to ensure exclusivity and privacy. The décor of each Aman resort makes use of locally sourced materials, reflecting elements of the natural surroundings and the traditions of local cultures. Since 1988, when flagship Amanpuri (‘place of peace’) opened in Phuket, Thailand, Amanresorts has established resorts in Bhutan (Amankora, 2004), Cambodia (Amansara, 2002), China (Aman at Summer Palace, Beijing, 2008), France (Le Mélézin, 1992), French Polynesia (Hotel Bora Bora, 1989), Indonesia (Amandari, 1989; Amanusa and Amankila, 1992; Amanwana, 1993 and Amanjiwo, 1997), India (Aman-i-Khás, 2003; Amanbagh, 2005 and Aman New Delhi, 2009), Laos (Amantaka, 2009), Montenegro (Aman Sveti Stefan – Villa Miločer, 2008), Morocco (Amanjena, 2000), Philippines (Amanpulo, 1993), Sri Lanka (Amangalla, 2005 and Amanwella, 2005), Turks & Caicos Islands (Amanyara, 2006) and USA (Amangani, 1998 and Amangiri, 2009).