Augusta National has unveiled its new Player Services Building, a three-story facility designed to give Masters competitors a more complete experience from arrival to departure. The building sits behind the practice range and is reserved for players, immediate family members, coaches, caddies, and trainers, with public access, media, and player agents all excluded.
Masters chairman Fred Ridley described the project last year by saying, “This improvement will offer the competitors in the Masters facilities from arrival until departure unlike anything in sports.” The latest images released by Augusta National show a complex built to support comfort, performance, recovery, and privacy at every step.
A hidden arrival route built for discretion
The process begins underground, where players enter through a garage before walking into a long interior hallway. That path keeps arrivals separate from the tournament grounds and reinforces the club’s focus on controlled access and a quiet environment.
The lobby then opens into a polished central space that sets the tone for the rest of the building. Augusta National’s design choices suggest the club wanted the first impression to feel both formal and functional, with the same attention to presentation that defines the rest of the property.
A lounge with Masters history
Before players reach the locker room, they pass through a lounge that carries one of the building’s most notable touches. According to the Associated Press, the room displays all four trophies from Bobby Jones’ 1930 Grand Slam, on loan from Atlanta Athletic Club during tournament week.
That historical detail ties the new structure directly to the Masters’ roots. It also gives competitors a space that connects modern tournament infrastructure with one of golf’s most important chapters.
Locker room and recovery areas expand the player footprint
The champions locker room remains in the Augusta National clubhouse, but the new building adds a separate player locker room with 100 lockers. The new setup gives the field more room and helps distribute activity away from the clubhouse core.
The performance and recovery level includes physiotherapy and fitness areas, which are now central to the player experience. That arrangement reflects the modern demands of elite golf, where preparation increasingly depends on mobility work, treatment, and structured training between rounds.
Dining space overlooks the practice range
The building also includes dining spaces indoors and on a porch that looks out over the practice range. The Magnolia dining room and terrace give players a place to eat and relax without leaving the tournament environment.
The setting matters because it keeps daily routines close to the competitive area while still offering privacy and comfort. It also underlines Augusta National’s broader approach: every part of the experience should feel seamless, efficient, and exclusive.
- Underground garage entry for players
- Lobby and interior hallway access
- Player lounge with Bobby Jones Grand Slam trophies
- 100-locker player room
- Physio and fitness recovery areas
- Indoor and outdoor dining overlooking the practice range
The scale and layout of the building show how Augusta National continues to refine the Masters experience without changing its core identity. With the tournament approaching soon, the new Player Services Building stands as one more example of why Augusta still sets the standard for event presentation in golf.
Read more at: sports.yahoo.com




