I thought I'd be torn about this decision given that I lived around the area in Mill Creek for a bit during WGV's early years, but I totally understand the move. When it opened, golf was a much more popular sport thanks to Tiger Woods and gated golf communities were springing up all over NE Florida so it made sense for the county to provide incentives and build the infrastructure to make this happen. Unfortunately, even with its convenient and easy-access location; the big reduction of big-time events held there, the PGA moving their media and production facilities to Ponte Vedra Beach, declining corporate sponsorship, the declining interest of a younger generation watching and playing golf, and the PGA leadership's waning promotion and support does not warrant maintaining a museum of such size and stature. It certainly does not help it's cause when the PGA announced this year the long-delayed induction of its most famous golfer to their Hall Of Fame, they had the ceremony NOT in the Hall Of Fame he was being inducted in.
But this interesting fact really proved the viability of a project like this: Since the time the World Golf Hall of Fame started construction up to now, St. Augustine, just 15 or so miles down the road, has seen an increase of over a million yearly visitors! And yet all those visitors still couldn't keep the Hall of Fame's attendance from cratering. What makes you think any other location for something like this would be that more successful?
At least the county got a new convention center, highway interchange, and a hotel resort worthy enough for the World Champion New England Patriots to stay in during their Super Bowl appearance in Jax. A more scaled down version will probably never be bonkers successful, but hopefully a lot more manageable.
It was nice while it lasted. Now see it before it's gone!