Fun, meet golf.

It’s a reunion (or perhaps a blind first date?) that the design teams of golf legends Arnold Palmer and Annika Sorenstam hope to bring to the Twin Cities’ newest public golf course taking shape in Lake Elmo.

Driveable par 4’s, wide fairways, a nighttime par-3 course, and water hazards that can be avoided if you hate going kerplunk — those are among the features designers say will make the Royal Golf Club accessible to the average hack, while still being capable of hosting a PGA Tour-level event. The new course could open as soon as June 2017.

Royal Golf Club probably will remain best known to many as the former Tartan Park Golf Course, the longtime resort for 3M employees, their families and clients. Amid flagging participation, even after 3M Co. opened the course to the public in 2014, the Maplewood-based company closed the facility last year.

Earlier this year, it sold the site for $5 million to Hollis Cavner, a coordinator of PGA Tour events. Locally, Cavner is best known for running the 3M Championship that took place last weekend at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, a course that Cavner teamed up with Palmer to develop.

Legions of 3Mers know Tartan for its 27 holes, as well as tennis courts, lawn bowling, archery range and a clubhouse, that stretched across 477 acres of rolling landscape overlooking Horseshoe Lake. Out of that, Arnold Palmer Design Co. and Annika Course Design have carved out an 18-hole track, driving range, practice area and 9-hole par-3 course, all surrounded by 310 new homes.

BEST METRO COURSE?

And they’re making bold promises.

No stranger to showmanship, Cavner in March proclaimed that Royal “will be the best golf course in the metro area.” With the likes of TPC and Hazeltine National Golf Club in Chaska, among others, that’s a bold statement.

On Thursday, as Palmer and Sorenstam toured the course, essentially signing off on the final designs before fairway grasses are planted, Cavner said that he believes Royal will be a strong enough course to challenge the best in the world. “We can host anything,” he said.

Yet — unlike modern championship courses that feature monstrous distances — Royal will be capable of playing for any skill level, designers say.

For example, from Tartan’s three 9-hole courses, a round of 18 could be played as short as 5,475 yards, or as long as 6,847 yards. Royal’s 18 holes can play a beastly 7,167 yards from the back tees, or shorter than 4,000 yards from the front tees, said Thad Layton, a senior course architect with Palmer’s firm and the lead designer at Royal.

“We want it to never play the same way twice,” said Layton. “By changing the hole location and changing the tee locations, we can create vastly different golf holes.”

Layton’s charge was not to erase Tartan, but rather to work with the existing landscape, and even the general confines of two previous 9-hole links, and reinvent the golf experience to make it accessible for all, he said.

“We didn’t set out to create a major championship course,” he said Thursday. “Our philosophy was to keep the natural beauty we already had here. And for the course, first, to make it fun.”

How so?

“It’s no fun to lose golf balls,” Layton said. So fairways are often 50 yards wide, and common configurations will not force golfers to carry shots over water — “although there might be a reward if they do.” But hazard avoidance won’t simply offer detours for high handicappers, Layton said. “We design the greens to be more receptive to those approaches.”

REACHABLE PAR 4’S

In addition, Layton said the course features two short par-4 holes with driveable greens. The third hole is uphill, but at a mere 300 yards, reachable for big hitters who aim to cut a late dog leg. However, from that angle, the ball must carry a sand trap and stay put on a relatively small green made shallower by the angle of approach. On the other hand, the restrained player can avoid the trouble by playing safely into the fairway, which offers up an approach to the green’s receptive side.

“It equalizes two very different levels of players,” he said.

That stretch of holes follows the landscape and direction of play as one of Tartan’s nines, and the topography likely will be recognizable to those familiar with Tartan. However, the short par-4 third, for example, and the fourth, were drawn from what had been a long, uphill par 5 with a blind second shot. Layton said it was Sorenstam herself who objected to that hole as an arduous slog for golfers of average skill, and with her input, that stretch of the course has been re-invented.

On the other hand, Royal’s back nine, which will be located on the eastern half of the property, exhibits holes completely rebuilt on the land. “That’s really new golf,” Layton said.

Lastly, on the fun scale, getting sand in your shoes and face doesn’t generally rate high, and Layton said Royal, at this point, throws a mere 30 bunkers at the golfer. (Compare that to 107 at Hazeltine, which will host the Ryder Cup this fall.) To be clear, sand comes into play, Layton said, but only in key places. General waywardness is not penalized with sand traps, he said.

“You don’t need a ton of sand to have a great golf course,” he said. “Look at Augusta. It has 43 (bunkers).”

In addition, Royal will offer a 9-hole “family par 3” course offering holes between 40 yards and 120 yards. That course will be lighted, Cavner said.

“We want people to play here when they have time,” he said.

Greens fees have not been decided.