Instead of hosting golf’s best at its annual US PGA Tour event last July, the Greenbrier served as a shelter for victims of the devastating floods that hit West Virginia. The resort itself was a casualty of the disaster, with its five courses receiving heavy damage. Owner Jim Justice warned that the Old White course, site of the US Tour’s Greenbrier Classic, would have to be completely overhauled.

However, on Wednesday the resort announced the Old White course will reopen to the public this northern summer on July 10. Two other courses – the Snead and Meadows – will do so on May 14 and 26; the Greenbrier Course will be ready for play on March 1, albeit with only 12 holes. A fifth course, Oakhurst Links, remains closed for repair.

The US PGA Tour will return to the White Sulphur Springs estate on July 6. The tour and Greenbrier are contracted for the event until 2021.

Aside from the tournament, the resort has hosted the 1979 Ryder Cup and 1994 Solheim Cup. Greenbrier is also known for housing a declassified Cold War secret bunker.