The Best Clubhouses in Golf: Golf Digest Names the 30 Greatest (Classic and Modern)

Courses

A clubhouse is a three-dimensional space that is the sum of the locker rooms, the bar, the dining rooms and more. And it exudes a certain character through its architectural forms. We asked our 1,700+ course-ranking panelists to evaluate the greatness of golf’s best clubhouses on a 1-10 scale.

We instructed our panelists to disregard the club’s history and membership. The feeling of the entrance, the flow of human traffic, and the utility of each square foot are important considerations, but when you get down to it, the only question is: “How much does the clubhouse make me want to spend time here?”

RELATED: How golf’s best clubhouses create a lasting impression

Whether you prefer the history and character of golf’s earliest clubhouses or the grandeur and amenities of the newest, a thoughtfully designed clubhouse creates a lasting impression. For the first time, Golf Digest has determined America’s Greatest Clubhouses.

CLASSIC

Augusta National Golf Club clubhouse from Magnolia Lane
Augusta National

Augusta (Ga.) National G.C.

When horticulturalist Dennis Redmond built a plantation house in the 1850s, he made a prescient choice of materials, creating one of the first poured-concrete structures in the South and giving it the durability to live on as Augusta’s clubhouse.


Baltusrol Clubhouse
Photo: PGA Of America via Getty Images

Baltusrol G.C., Springfield, N.J.

Now a National Historic Landmark, the clubhouse, a Tudor Revival masterpiece, was designed in 1910 by Chester H. Kirk after the original clubhouse—the former house of a New Jersey farmer, Baltus Roll—was destroyed in a fire.

Jon Cavalier

Congressional C.C., Bethesda, Md.

Designed in 1924 by Philip M. Julien, the Spanish Colonial Revival-style clubhouse has made additions over the years but has done a great job at maintaining its relationship with the golf course.


Jon Cavalier

The Country Club, Chestnut Hill, Mass.

In 1882, a group of Bostonians acquired land to found The Country Club. They renovated an old farmhouse into the nation’s first clubhouse for what would be the first country club in the United States.

Jon Cavalier

The Fernando is a drink named after the long-time bartender down in the men’s locker room.


Indian Creek C.C., Miami Beach, Fla.

Designed by Swiss-born architect Maurice Fatio in 1929, the clubhouse is “cathedral-like,” says Richard Diedrich, author of
The 19th Hole: Architecture of the Golf Clubhouse. And because it was so often emulated, it “became a standard vernacular.”


Los Angeles C.C.

When the club moved to its current site in 1911, it hired member and architect Sumner Hunt to design its clubhouse, which underwent a restoration in 2016 in preparation for the 2017 Walker Cup and 2023 U.S. Open.


Jon Cavalier

Medinah (Ill.) C.C.

When a group of Chicago Shriners founded the club in the 1920s, they turned to the architect who had co-designed their Medinah Temple, Richard G. Schmid, who created a sprawling 110,000-square-foot clubhouse combining Byzantine, Louis XIV and Italianate architectural styles.


Jon Cavalier

National G. Links of America, Southampton, N.Y.

Chicago architect and founding member Jarvis Hunt designed the 25,000-square-foot clubhouse in 1912, which includes a screened-in porch affectionately known as The Birdcage.

RELATED: Alongside golf’s best clubhouses, here are America’s 50 best locker rooms


Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

Newport (R.I.) C.C.

This Beaux-Arts chateau, designed in the 1890s, was the second purpose-built clubhouse in the country, and the first project in the illustrious career of architect Whitney Warren.

RELATED: How golf’s best clubhouses create a lasting impression


Jon Cavalier

Oakmont (Pa.) C.C.

In the way architect Edward Stotz designed the double-gable clubhouse, the side that now faces the course was intended as the arrival side, an advantageous change that led to its commanding presence overlooking the ninth green.


Riviera C.C., Pacific Palisades, Calif.

Known as the Grand Hotel of Golf, the Spanish Colonial Revival clubhouse opened in 1928.


Jon Cavalier

San Francisco G.C.

Built in 1915, the clubhouse has many of its original features, including a fireplace in the locker room and the original wood lockers.


Jon Cavalier

Seminole G.C., Juno Beach, Fla.

Marion Sims Wyeth’s Spanish Colonial design includes a locker room with 30-foot ceilings lined with wood beams.


Jon Cavalier

Shinnecock Hills G.C., Southampton, N.Y.

Designed by Stanford White in 1892, and restored before the 2018 U.S. Open, the clubhouse was the first purpose-built clubhouse in the United States.


Jon Cavalier

Winged Foot G.C., Mamaroneck, N.Y.

Designed in the 1920s by Clifford Wendehack, Winged Foot’s clubhouse was built using rock excavated during the making of the club’s A.W. Tillinghast layouts.

MODERN

The Alotian Club, Roland, Ark.

Architect Mark Finlay designed a series of structures at Alotian, including its clubhouse, which he clad in white clapboard as a nod to Augusta National, where the Alotian founder grew up playing golf.


Bighorn Golf Club clubhouse
Mark Davidson

Courtesy of Bighorn

Bighorn G.C., Palm Desert, Calif.

At 80,000 square feet and with a price of $70 million, the clubhouse, designed by Swaback Partners, is a striking marriage between modernist angles and an earthy material palette of limestone and travertine that make it seem at home in the desert.


Roger Ferris + Partners

The Bridge, Bridgehampton, N.Y.

Designed by Roger Ferris, the clubhouse makes a modernist glass-and-steel statement with environmental bona fides (its roof captures rainfall and enhances natural ventilation, and the striking cypress louvers come from sustainable forests).


Jon Cavalier

Calusa Pines G.C., Naples, Fla.

Calusa Pines owner Gary Chensoff reportedly traveled to more than 100 clubs to study their clubhouses with the aim of making his clubhouse, built in 2003, seem as though it was built 100 years earlier.

RELATED: Just like golf’s best clubhouses, everybody wants to stay in one of golf’s coolest rooms—here are the 18 best


Congaree, Ridgeland, S.C.

Set on a former South Carolina plantation, the clubhouse—members call it the lodge—was designed by Jeff Harbinson with Georgian features and barn aesthetics to make it blend with existing architecture, or, as director of golf Bruce Davidson says, “to make it look like it had always been there.”


Jon Cavalier

Friar’s Head G.C., Baiting Hollow, N.Y.

Overlooking Long Island Sound, the clubhouse was made with stone shipped over the Sound from Westchester County.

The Hideaway, La Quinta, Calif.

The Spanish Colonial clubhouse has a dining room, wine cellar, fitness center, full-service spa and views of the Santa Rosa mountains.


Presidents Cup  Course Scenics
Chris Condon

Liberty National G.C., Jersey City, N.J.

Set into the landscape, the Lindsay Newman-designed clubhouse offers views of the Statue of Liberty and Manhattan skyline through its floor-to-ceiling glass wall.


Courtesy of the club/Vance Fox

Martis Camp G.C., Truckee, Calif.

Before architect John Sather designed the clubhouse, he spent a summer on-site to better tailor the building into the land, resulting in a structure seamlessly wedded to a promontory overlooking the 18th fairway and the valley beyond.


Inside the locker room at Mayacama.

Mayacama G.C., Santa Rosa, Calif.

In the heart of Sonoma’s wine country, the Barry Berkus-designed rustic-style clubhouse includes all the usual trappings—plus a wine cellar and wine lockers.


Jon Cavalier

Nanea G.C., Kailua-Kona, Hawaii

Merged into its landscape by designer Francis S. Oda of Group 70 International, the clubhouse takes its distinctive form from the volcanic cones that animate Hawaii’s landscape.


Rock Creek Cattle Company, Deer Lodge, Mont.

Tucked into the Montana woods on the banks of Rock Creek, the “cattlemen’s club” looks the part of a western ranch house with timber beams, taxidermy and fireplaces.


Sherwood Country Club
Matt Walla

Sherwood C.C., Thousand Oaks, Calif.

Built in 1988, the clubhouse was designed by Arnold C. Savrann in a traditional neo-Georgian style.


Snake River Sporting Club, Jackson, Wyo.

The Hart Howerton-designed clubhouse fits into its Jackson Hole surroundings, a stone-and-timber lodge with wood-burning fireplaces and expansive views.


Whisper Rock G.C., Scottsdale

As general manager Trent Rathbun says, the clubhouse was to evoke “traditional golf values” and to “make it look like it had been there longer than it had,” which architect Douglas Fredrikson delivered with a Southwest vernacular design.

RELATED: Golf Digest’s latest rankings: The best courses in every state


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