The European Club in Wicklow, consistently ranked among the world’s top 100 golf courses, has closed since December 2025 for a major Irish golf course renovation that promises to rival the best destinations internationally
One of Ireland’s most celebrated golf courses is undergoing a sweeping transformation, with the revamped venue beginning to take shape.
The European Club in Wicklow, consistently ranked amongst the world’s top 100 courses, has long been regarded as a notoriously demanding challenge for golfers of all abilities.
The course record stands at a relatively modest-sounding 67 — by professional standards — a score set by none other than Tiger Woods in 2002 as he prepared for that year’s Open at Muirfield.
Following his Irish Amateur title victory at the course in 2006, Rory McIlroy described it as “probably the best links course I have ever played”.
Founded by Pat Ruddy in 1987, the County Wicklow links was subsequently listed on the property market for in excess of €35m, reports the Irish Mirror.
Irish duo Raymond and Nicky Conlan acquired the club in 2025, with substantial investment and a comprehensive overhaul in the pipeline. The course shut its doors in December 2025, with a reopening pencilled in for spring 2027.
“This project represents a significant investment and will create a new and different golfing offering, designed to stand alongside the very best destinations internationally,” members were informed at the time of closure.
The Brittas Bay Club has been offering glimpses of the redevelopment progress and its impressive results across its social media platforms.
A state-of-the-art 4,000-square-foot clubhouse will feature a comprehensively stocked pro shop, alongside dedicated changing facilities for both men and women, complete with shower amenities. A dining area will occupy the upper level, with expansive windows providing uninterrupted panoramas of the golf course and the Irish Sea beyond.
Kyle Phillips has designed the reimagined course. His approach, the club explains, ‘centres on exposing the site’s natural qualities. Rather than blindness and severe challenge, the new routing emphasises strategic variety and visual drama’.
Turfgrass consultancy oversees the agronomy, while Golf Link Evolve manages the construction work, having previously been involved with Royal Birkdale, St Andrews Old Course and Turnberry.
The Brittas Bay Club has invited golfers to ‘experience Kyle Phillips’ reimagining of one of Ireland’s most challenging links layouts’.
“The reopened venue will feature improved playability whilst retaining championship credentials at this spectacular Irish Sea location,” the club states.
“Phillips’ redesign prioritises playability improvements through expanded sightlines and multiple strategic options per hole. The routing will expose more sea vistas across all 18 holes whilst reducing the difficulty that characterised Ruddy’s original.
“Championship length remains at approximately 7,400 yards, but the new layout includes at least one drivable par-4 under 400 yards.”
During the refurbishment, agronomists were brought in to restore native plant species and grasses characteristic of the area, located 65km south of Dublin.

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