For much of his life, Ben Cowan-Dewar has been traveling the world, acquainting himself with spectacular golf courses in remote locations. As the co-founder and CEO of The Cabot Collection, a leading developer of luxury golf resorts, he has helped shape many such properties, too.
In all his globe-trotting, though, Cowan-Dewar says, he has never been anywhere like Lofoten Links.
“It’s the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen,” he says.
A seaside design, situated north of the Arctic Circle, in a tiny island town in Norway, the course traces its origins to 1998, when Frode Hov, a local farmer with a love for golf, built six holes on his family’s land. In 2015, after years of tinkering, Hov enlisted the architect Jeremy Turner to expand the layout to a full 18.
As it evolved, the project caught the eye of aficionados, Cowan-Dewar included.
“There aren’t a lot of people in the golf world who have built courses in remote places hoping that people will find them,” Cowan-Dewar says. “So we tend to know each other.”
On his first trip to Lofoten (pronounced luh-FOO-ten) Links, in the summer of 2019, Cowan-Dewar joined Hov on the first tee at 11 p.m., with the sun slung low but not about to set. Mountains loomed behind them. Before them stretched the Norwegian Sea.
“It was magical,” Cowan-Dewar says. “We probably finished at around 2 a.m., and in all that time, the sun never hit the horizon line.”
In early 2020, Cowan-Dewar and Mike Keiser, a co-founder of Cabot and the developer of Bandon Dunes, considered making an offer to acquire Lofoten Links. But when the pandemic hit, they opted to focus on their own assets instead. As Covid lingered and golf boomed, Lofoten only gained in acclaim. In 2023, it debuted on GOLF’s roster of Top 100 Courses in the World, ringing in at No. 88.
Two months ago, Cowan-Dewar, busy with multiple Cabot projects, returned to Lofoten Links and played another round under the midnight sun. The visit reaffirmed his confidence in another deal he’d been working on, which has now been made official.
Lofoten Links ranks 88th among GOLF’s Top 100 Courses in the World. Kevin Murray
On Monday, Cabot announced a “strategic investment” in Lofoten Links, a move that Cowan-Dewar says “effortlessly aligns with our vision of delivering world-class golf and experiences across the globe’s most remarkable destinations.” Without specifying its scope, Cowan-Dewar describes the investment as “meaningful” and says that he expects it to grow over time. For now, he says, the financial injection will focus on “stuff on the margins of what is already a spectacular destination” whose existing amenities include Nordic-style lodges and an on-site restaurant.
For Cabot, the deal comes amid a period of headline-making international growth. Earlier this summer, the company established its first foothold on continental Europe when it purchased Golf Du Medoc Resort, which it has refashioned into Cabot Bordeaux, adding to a portfolio that includes Cabot Cape Breton in Nova Scotia; Cabot Saint Lucia in the Caribbean; Cabot Revelstoke in British Columbia; Cabot Citrus Farms in Florida; and Cabot Highlands in Scotland.