Less than a year after being purchased by a local nonprofit, a portion of a long-dormant Goochland golf course is back up for grabs as the owner rethinks its plans for converting the site into a Covid memorial.
Approximately 150 acres that were once part of Royal Virginian Golf Course were listed for sale last week for $1.8 million.
The seller is Humanitarian Ambassadors of America Community Development Corp., which bought the same acreage in May 2022 for $750,000.
Led by Arlene Simmons, the group’s initial vision for the property included a memorial for those who died from Covid, along with rock gardens, water features, vegetable gardens and agricultural and educational programs. The plan was budgeted to cost $33 million, much of which was to be donated.
But Simmons said this week that her Goochland plans are on hold while her organization deals with the loss of multiple key members due to illnesses and deaths.
“Due to some issues, it’s back on the market as of Friday and we are exploring options as far as the property is concerned,” Simmons said. “We’ve put everything on hold right now.”
Simmons said the listing doesn’t necessarily spell the end of the memorial project altogether, as it may take shape in another location elsewhere in the region. She said they are looking for a new site for the memorial closer to her group’s headquarters in South Richmond.
“In the meantime we are exploring an alternative (memorial site), something closer to home because we don’t have the manpower now to be able to do this in Goochland,” she said.
Simmons’ nonprofit has been around for 25 years. She describes the group as community advocates doing work related to issues of health, crime and homelessness. She said the group helped relocate the homeless after the closure of the so-called “Tent City” in the city of Richmond during the pandemic. The group also accepts and distributes in-kind donations for larger nonprofits during instances of disaster or trauma.
The idea for a Covid memorial came to her after several of her relatives died after being stricken with the virus, and also volunteering as a hospice counselor for Covid patients and their families.
With the vision for the memorial in her mind, she then set out to find a tranquil setting somewhere in the region. She found just that at the old golf course that’s been mostly reclaimed by nature.
The Royal Virginian course fell into foreclosure in 2011 and sold for $525,000, before being purchased by an entity tied to Charlotteville businessman Justin Beights in 2018 for $750,000. Beights then shuttered the course and has since floated uses for the pastoral property, including planting trees for conservation tax credits and creating substance abuse recovery homes near a pond on the site.
Beights still owns the course’s remaining 107 acres, which sits across Royal Virginian Parkway from Simmons’ portion.
A message left for Beights this week was not returned.
Simmons said her efforts in Goochland went as far as holding an honorary groundbreaking last year, doing minor clearing and renovations at the course’s old clubhouse, and meeting with county administrators last month.
Simmons’ group is represented in the sale by Stephanie Taylor of EXP Realty, who also handled the group’s purchase of the land.
“We’re asking people to bring any options to the table,” Simmons said.
“We remain excited about honoring those who have lost their lives to Covid and to health challenges and those that are grieving. And just doing everything that will strengthen people’s outlook on health and the daily challenges.”
Less than a year after being purchased by a local nonprofit, a portion of a long-dormant Goochland golf course is back up for grabs as the owner rethinks its plans for converting the site into a Covid memorial.
Approximately 150 acres that were once part of Royal Virginian Golf Course were listed for sale last week for $1.8 million.
The seller is Humanitarian Ambassadors of America Community Development Corp., which bought the same acreage in May 2022 for $750,000.
Led by Arlene Simmons, the group’s initial vision for the property included a memorial for those who died from Covid, along with rock gardens, water features, vegetable gardens and agricultural and educational programs. The plan was budgeted to cost $33 million, much of which was to be donated.
But Simmons said this week that her Goochland plans are on hold while her organization deals with the loss of multiple key members due to illnesses and deaths.
“Due to some issues, it’s back on the market as of Friday and we are exploring options as far as the property is concerned,” Simmons said. “We’ve put everything on hold right now.”
Simmons said the listing doesn’t necessarily spell the end of the memorial project altogether, as it may take shape in another location elsewhere in the region. She said they are looking for a new site for the memorial closer to her group’s headquarters in South Richmond.
“In the meantime we are exploring an alternative (memorial site), something closer to home because we don’t have the manpower now to be able to do this in Goochland,” she said.
Simmons’ nonprofit has been around for 25 years. She describes the group as community advocates doing work related to issues of health, crime and homelessness. She said the group helped relocate the homeless after the closure of the so-called “Tent City” in the city of Richmond during the pandemic. The group also accepts and distributes in-kind donations for larger nonprofits during instances of disaster or trauma.
The idea for a Covid memorial came to her after several of her relatives died after being stricken with the virus, and also volunteering as a hospice counselor for Covid patients and their families.
With the vision for the memorial in her mind, she then set out to find a tranquil setting somewhere in the region. She found just that at the old golf course that’s been mostly reclaimed by nature.
The Royal Virginian course fell into foreclosure in 2011 and sold for $525,000, before being purchased by an entity tied to Charlotteville businessman Justin Beights in 2018 for $750,000. Beights then shuttered the course and has since floated uses for the pastoral property, including planting trees for conservation tax credits and creating substance abuse recovery homes near a pond on the site.
Beights still owns the course’s remaining 107 acres, which sits across Royal Virginian Parkway from Simmons’ portion.
A message left for Beights this week was not returned.
Simmons said her efforts in Goochland went as far as holding an honorary groundbreaking last year, doing minor clearing and renovations at the course’s old clubhouse, and meeting with county administrators last month.
Simmons’ group is represented in the sale by Stephanie Taylor of EXP Realty, who also handled the group’s purchase of the land.
“We’re asking people to bring any options to the table,” Simmons said.
“We remain excited about honoring those who have lost their lives to Covid and to health challenges and those that are grieving. And just doing everything that will strengthen people’s outlook on health and the daily challenges.”
A tidy little profit in less than a year…..
Apparently, there’s still profit in COVID. Pretty sad if that’s what this ends up as.
And $33 million to build a park? Is it made of gold? Or is Simmons family members the contractors? This ‘has / had’ scam written all over it…..But now they’re trying to more than double their investment in 10 months…..
And they have no website? Really? Zero real info about them in public? Really?
Move along, nothing to see here.
The previous seller should be given the option to buy it back for $750K.
Would be cool to make it a golf course again. Only sad thing is my current investments haven’t paid off yet D:.
I know very little about non-profits, but the cynic in me thinks this is Covid Grift? Am I missing something? So the non-profit purchased the property for $750, and are selling for $1.8m. In 2019 they filed a postcard file (which I think means they had less than $50,0000?) After a cursory search:
Virginia SCC = https://cis.scc.virginia.gov/EntitySearch/BusinessFilings
Charity Navigator = https://www.charitynavigator.org/ein/541926346
Last postcard IRS filing in 2019 – https://apps.irs.gov/app/eos/details/
Non profits can make a profit. and they should to cover their expenses to support their mission This article seems like it was written by a bot. A few facts but no substance or theory or insider opinion by the author. So I can only surmise this was a market driven sale. I can’t tell if the seller took $750k as an agreement to build a covid memorial? Absent that it seems This lady bought the land fair and square Now if she used some Sort of covid funding. Different story. But from what I can tell She could have… Read more »
This doesn’t add up.
No Covid memorial? Damn, I wanted to put up a granite marker listing everything we did wrong:
-“vaccines”
-vax mandates
-closing businesses
-closing parks
-closing schools
-closing churches
-suppressing information on the origins of Covid
-suppressing information on early treatment options
-mask mandates
-masking, period
-ventilators
-hand sanitizer
-failing to segregate the vulnerable
-social distancing
Maybe I’ll erect that marker anyway. I’ll leave a chisel for people too inscribe on the monument any items I missed.
Go for it buddy, make a nice plague in your yard. I’ll even leave a little American flag for the fallen people who got tricked into Satan’s trap of taking the scamdemic’s vaccine.
$33 million for a park? bruh…
Yeah the original idea is pretty stupid and honestly a scam to pull at gullible people’s heart strings.
I agree with others that something doesn’t add up here and the author needs to dig deeper into this. I remember back when reading that someone was going to “raise $33M for a COVID Memorial” seemed comically ridiculous. No one’s going to give money to that. How many employees does this organization actually have? Is their LLC active? They don’t even have a website?