The golf course at St. Andrew's East sits on 165 acres of gently rolling terrain north of Toronto, with four natural starting points that allow the Club to operate without a tee sheet. That isn't an accident. The original architect, Rene Muylaert, designed the routing around that premise — and the clubhouse was placed on the highest point of land to make it work.
The course has been refined continuously since opening. Award-winning architect Doug Carrick developed a long-range improvement plan that has guided the work for more than two decades, and the most recent renovation — completed in 2025 — represents the most significant upgrade in the Club's history: a new dual-line irrigation system, rationalized bunkers, improved cart paths, and rebuilt tee complexes across the full 18 holes.
The result is a golf course that plays differently than it looks. The terrain rewards local knowledge. The greens have character. The conditions reflect the Club's commitment to investing in the course year after year, on behalf of the people who own it.
It's not the longest course in the GTA. It is one of the most enjoyable to play.