In St Andrews, a New Generation Finds Its Way to the Old Course

For golf travelers with an eye for detail, there are places that go beyond the scorecard. Places where the setting, the ritual, and the history offer as much as the golf itself. St Andrews is one of them. Not because it's chasing relevance, but because it's stayed exactly the same.And that, increasingly, is the appeal.At the center of it all is Rusacks St Andrews, perched along the 18th fairway of the Old Course. It's a front-row seat to golf's most storied theater, but it’s also quietly evolving. The interiors feel curated rather than themed, with nods to golf lore that avoid cliché. There’s a sense that the team at Marine & Lawn Hotels & Resorts understands something essential: you don’t need to modernize St Andrews, you just need to make room for people to appreciate it in their own way.Around town, subtle shifts are happening. Pluto, a boutique tucked off the main drag, stocks vintage designer pieces alongside emerging golf brands like Metalwood and Students Golf, offering a point of entry for travelers who grew up caring about aesthetics as much as architecture. You won’t see Supreme headcovers on every tee box of St Andrews Links' seven courses, but you might catch a 20-something pairing spiked brogues with a Malbon jumper. That alone is progress for someone tapped into golf's style evolution. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Marine & Lawn Hotels & Resorts (@marineandlawn)And while the Old Course remains the bucket-list draw, Scotland’s depth shows itself just outside the spotlight. Dumbarnie Links, a newer addition to the coastline, plays like a highlight reel. It's dramatic, generous and genuinely fun. Further north, the more remote Royal Dornoch still feels like a secret despite being widely celebrated by the golfing public. Across the road, Dornoch Station offers a warm bed, a fireside dram and the rare feeling that time can pause.What’s emerging isn’t a rejection of golf’s roots, but a reconsideration of how to engage with them. Rusacks isn’t trying to be anything it's not, it’s simply comfortable enough comfortable enough to let a new generation discover that respect for the game doesn’t have to mean rigid adherence.This isn't about disrupting tradition. It’s about recognizing taste on the course, in the hotel and in the quiet spaces between. And for those willing to lean in, there’s a richness here that doesn’t need dressing up.For more information, visit the official Rusacks St Andrews website.Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast

May 23, 2025 - 16:08
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In St Andrews, a New Generation Finds Its Way to the Old Course

For golf travelers with an eye for detail, there are places that go beyond the scorecard. Places where the setting, the ritual, and the history offer as much as the golf itself. St Andrews is one of them. Not because it's chasing relevance, but because it's stayed exactly the same.

And that, increasingly, is the appeal.

At the center of it all is Rusacks St Andrews, perched along the 18th fairway of the Old Course. It's a front-row seat to golf's most storied theater, but it’s also quietly evolving. The interiors feel curated rather than themed, with nods to golf lore that avoid cliché. There’s a sense that the team at Marine & Lawn Hotels & Resorts understands something essential: you don’t need to modernize St Andrews, you just need to make room for people to appreciate it in their own way.

Around town, subtle shifts are happening. Pluto, a boutique tucked off the main drag, stocks vintage designer pieces alongside emerging golf brands like Metalwood and Students Golf, offering a point of entry for travelers who grew up caring about aesthetics as much as architecture. You won’t see Supreme headcovers on every tee box of St Andrews Links' seven courses, but you might catch a 20-something pairing spiked brogues with a Malbon jumper. That alone is progress for someone tapped into golf's style evolution.

And while the Old Course remains the bucket-list draw, Scotland’s depth shows itself just outside the spotlight. Dumbarnie Links, a newer addition to the coastline, plays like a highlight reel. It's dramatic, generous and genuinely fun. Further north, the more remote Royal Dornoch still feels like a secret despite being widely celebrated by the golfing public. Across the road, Dornoch Station offers a warm bed, a fireside dram and the rare feeling that time can pause.

What’s emerging isn’t a rejection of golf’s roots, but a reconsideration of how to engage with them. Rusacks isn’t trying to be anything it's not, it’s simply comfortable enough comfortable enough to let a new generation discover that respect for the game doesn’t have to mean rigid adherence.

This isn't about disrupting tradition. It’s about recognizing taste on the course, in the hotel and in the quiet spaces between. And for those willing to lean in, there’s a richness here that doesn’t need dressing up.

For more information, visit the official Rusacks St Andrews website.

Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast