Donald Trump's new Aberdeenshire golf course given 2025 opening date

Bosses said the former US president's new site will compliment the existing course to offer "the greatest 36 holes in golf."

Author: PA MediaPublished 7th Oct 2024
Last updated 7th Oct 2024

Donald Trump's new links golf course in Aberdeenshire will open in summer next year.

The Former US president's new site will compliment the existing course to offer the greatest 36 holes in golf, according to bosses.

Trump International said the new championship links will be "one of the most environmentally-friendly and sustainable courses ever built", with views across the North Sea.

Mr Trump and his son Eric broke ground last spring at the site, which is designed to accompany the existing world-ranked championship links at Trump International near Balmedie.

Trump International said more than 10 hectares of vegetation has been translocated across the largest sand dunes in Scotland, allowing indigenous plants to thrive and expand, while one million sprigs of native marram grass have been planted and six tonnes of marram seeds harvested.

Sarah Malone, executive vice-president at Trump International, hailed "extraordinary progress" at the site.

She said: "This course is unlike any other links course ever built and is exceeding every expectation. There are very few great stretches of developable links land in the world as good as this.

"A truly remarkable, world-class team of architects, engineers, environmental scientists and industry specialists have been working tirelessly in the background, etching out every square inch of this phenomenal piece of land to create one of the great wonders in the world of golf."

Trump International said new wildlife habitats emerged within the wetlands areas, sand dunes, and heathlands, and most materials - other than drainage and irrigation pipework - were sourced on site to reduce the carbon footprint.

An "innovative environmentally-friendly freshwater and drainage system" has been engineered from wetlands and ponds to provide irrigation.

Clare Barber, principal director of project engineers Fairhurst, said: "Given the outstanding ecological and geomorphological setting of the site, our priority has been to provide engineering solutions which do not just meet the minimum standards, but enhance the natural landscape, with a particular focus on the water environment and biodiversity.

"Working with academic experts in the field, we have achieved engineering and course morphology designs which not only respect but complement the existing landform, taking account of ongoing natural processes."

Robert Maxfield, chief executive of the Professional Golfers' Association, said: "This could be one of the last great modern links to be built in Scotland.

"This course is an absolute gift to the game of golf, and I am pleased the course will be accessible and open to all."

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