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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Jason Lusk

Photos: Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia nears completion, and you need to see it to believe it

What do you get when you hire the famed design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw to build a course on one of the most dramatic meetings of land and sea imaginable? Ben Cowan-Dewar, co-founder and CEO of the Canadian-based Cabot Collection, has his answer in the Caribbean nation of St. Lucia.

Scheduled to open in December, Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia is perched above the Atlantic Ocean on cliffs that offer a simply ridiculous set of visuals on more than half the club’s 18 holes. Picture any of the most scenic holes anywhere – Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon, Pebble Beach Golf Links or Cypress Point in California, even the original Cabot courses in Nova Scotia as famous examples – and Point Hardy matches them all for you-gotta-be-joking views, proximity to the ocean and pulse-raising golf shots over cauldrons of salt spray.

All the holes at Point Hardy, including the inland holes atop a ridge or playing through a valley, are within sight of the ocean, and eight of them offer a chance to rinse a golf ball in salt water. On a day when the trade winds kick it up a notch, golfers will feel ocean spray at several points along the routing.

The hard part wasn’t building a dramatic course on the steep ground at the northern tip of the volcanic island. On a recent walk around the course as construction of Point Hardy nears completion, Coore said the toughest part was building golf holes on which the fun factor at least approaches the level of the visuals.

“Playability, playability, playability,” said Coore, who has routed some of the best courses to be constructed in the world over the past 30 years. “It would have been very easy to build a course where the views are incredible but that just wasn’t any fun to play, because the terrain is so steep. The challenge was to make it fun, to make people want to play it again.”

Did the team succeed on that front? Time will tell, and Golfweek will have plenty more on Cabot Saint Lucia in the coming months. In the meantime, just take in the incredible photos below of the two strings of golf holes closest to the ocean at Point Hardy.

Keep in mind with the following photos that the course is still in grow-in and that several holes haven’t been grassed yet, so brown areas on greens and fairways seen in these photos are completely expected as the grass takes root. The bunkers have not yet been filled with sand and appear as natural scrapes in the photos. This is still very much a work in progress.

And to answer a few questions we know are coming:

  • Point Hardy will allow some versions of public-access play early on as its membership role is filled, with details still being determined. Eventually the course will be at least mostly private.
  • Yes, it will be expensive compared to most U.S. daily-fee prices. Green fees and stay-and-play options have yet to be set, but don’t expect it to be cheap on a site like this. A vehicular analogy: This course is a Lamborghini full of bravado and pulse-racing moments, not a four-cylinder Kia that simply gets the job done, and the pricing will be along those lines.
  • Will it be among the best courses in the world? There’s no way to know where it will sit on Golfweek’s Best rankings of top courses in the Caribbean, Mexico, Central America and the Atlantic Islands until our raters visit and offer their scores. But don’t be surprised to see Point Hardy very near the top of that list.
  • Cabot Saint Lucia includes a housing development, ranging from fairway villas all the way up to mansions priced at millions of dollars. Besides the golf, there will be a beach club in a gorgeous bay and a full slate of luxury amenities. There are no plans for a traditional hotel. Accommodations will be available as rental luxury residences and villas.
  • Point Hardy Golf Club will play to 6,616 yards with a par of 71.

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The inland par-4 second (center of photo) and par-5 third (far right) holes offer long views…
The design team of Ben Crenshaw (left), Bill Coore (center) and course shaper Trev Dormer discuss…
Even on the inland holes atop a ridge, as seen from behind the third green, Point…
One of the inland holes at Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia, the downhill,…
The par-4 fifth, par-4 sixth and par-3 seventh play down a steep valley, with the string…
The aerial view of the seventh green and eighth tees on a promontory, looking back up…
The downhill, 139-yard, par-3 seventh offers two main teeing areas to a narrow green flanked by…
The 139-yard, par-3 seventh sits on a promontory of rock that just into the Atlantic Ocean…
Nos. 7, 8 and 9 play along cliffs to close out the front nine at Point…
The 160-yard, par-3 ninth (foreground in photo) and 469-yard, par-4 18th converge from opposite directions at…
The back nine at Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia climbs inland before returning…
The 307-yard, par-4 15th at Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia requires a semi-blind…
The green of the short par-4 15th sits atop a semi-sheltered cliff above a bay at…
The tee shot at the 156-yard, par-3 16th plays into the typical breezes and offers no…
The 156-yard, par-3 16th green at Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia sits tight…
The par-3 17th at Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia requires a tee shot…
The green of the 187-yard, par-3 17th sits on a cliff's point where the Atlantic curves…
Point Hardy Golf Club at Cabot Saint Lucia is slated to open in December 2023. (Jason…
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