In November 2006, Woods announced his intention to begin designing golf courses around the world through a new company, Tiger Woods Design.
A month later, he announced that the company's first course would be in Dubai as part of a 25.3-million-square-foot development, The Tiger Woods Dubai.
The Al Ruwaya Golf Course was initially expected to finish construction in 2009.
As of February 2010, only seven holes had been completed; in April 2011, The New York Times reported that the project had been shelved permanently.
In 2013, the partnership between Tiger Woods Design and Dubai Holding was dissolved.
Tiger Woods Design has taken on two other courses, neither of which has materialized.
In August 2007, Woods announced The Cliffs at High Carolina, a private course in the Blue Ridge Mountains near Asheville, North Carolina.
After a groundbreaking in November 2008, the project suffered cash flow problems and suspended construction.
A third course, in Punta Brava, Mexico, was announced in October 2008, but incurred delays due to issues with permits and an environmental impact study.[201][204] Construction on the Punta Brava course has not yet begun.
These projects have encountered problems that have been attributed to factors that include overly optimistic estimates of their value, declines throughout the global economy (particularly the U.S. crash in home prices), and the decreased appeal and marketability of Woods following his 2009 infidelity scandal.
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