
VIVÂMEE Hospitality has closed on a deal to scoop up two high-profile Maryland golf properties for about $25 million. According to Eye On Annapolis, the company is now in control of The Golf Club at South River, a private membership club just outside Annapolis, and Queenstown Harbor Golf Resort, a waterfront destination on the Eastern Shore.
VIVÂMEE says day-to-day operations and memberships will keep rolling while both properties are readied for expanded lodging, events, and wellness programming, a slow-and-steady approach meant to reassure golfers who do not love surprises unless they involve a hole-in-one.
How The Deal Was Put Together
As reported by Eye On Annapolis, the acquisition ran through Capital H6, LLC, with Accountable Equity, LLC acting as the private equity sponsor behind the scenes. The local outlet notes that the combined purchase includes 54 holes of championship golf and more than 870 acres of waterfront and conservation-protected land.
Eye On Annapolis also reports that the deal pushes VIVÂMEE’s Mid-Atlantic portfolio to six resort properties and five championship golf courses, a sizable regional footprint for a company that leans hard into the drive-to-destination model.
Who Financed The Purchase
The acquisition is being run through Accountable Equity’s Capital H6 fund, which is pitching the package to accredited investors as a Maryland waterfront hospitality platform. According to Accountable Equity, the fund plans to operate both sites under the VIVÂMEE management platform and to grow revenue by leaning into lodging, events, and cross-property packages.
The sponsor’s investor materials outline pro-forma projections and a perpetual ownership structure that is designed to throw off immediate cash flow while also targeting long-term appreciation, the kind of “have your fairway and own it too” pitch that tends to get attention in income-focused investment circles.
Course Footprints And Membership
Queenstown Harbor bills itself as a waterfront resort with two championship courses, on-site cottages, event venues, and upgraded practice facilities. The property is set up to host everything from buddy trips to corporate retreats and weddings, complete with the Bay views that justify all those cellphone photos on the 18th green.
The Golf Club at South River operates as an 18-hole private club that serves more than 600 member families and includes dining, fitness, and simulator amenities. Both sites list event-ready spaces and overnight options that line up neatly with VIVÂMEE’s focus on regional drive markets, where guests can skip the airport security line and head straight to the first tee.
Why Investors Are Swinging At Golf Now
Accountable Equity’s sales pitch leans on the sport’s recent rebound and strong regional demand. The firm cites a record 47.2 million Americans playing golf in 2024 and notes that the portfolio sits inside a roughly 9 million-person drive market, according to the fund’s materials.
The idea is that pairing a private membership club with a public waterfront resort creates complementary revenue streams, from green fees and member dues to lodging, events, food and beverage, and retail. That mix is supposed to smooth out seasonal swings and support more stable cash flow, a core part of the logic behind the Capital H6 fundraising effort and the plan to cross-market packages between South River and Queenstown Harbor.
What Locals Can Expect Next
VIVÂMEE has signaled that it wants to build on what is already in place, not rip it up. The company says it will honor “their existing communities, traditions and guest experiences,” as reported by Eye On Annapolis.
For members and regular visitors, that should translate into continuity of service while any upgrades to lodging, events, and wellness programming are rolled out in phases. Local officials, club leaders, and golfers are likely to keep a close eye on how quickly new ownership moves from concept to construction, and how much the promised investment changes the feel of two courses that already have loyal followings.









