I feel awkward to bring this one up, because I couldn't recommend spending a day there, but there is a par 3 in the city of Edinburgh I really enjoyed when I was at grad school. #13 at Carrick Knowe was remarkable enough that
I wrote a little piece on it. It's one of the best/quirkiest (intentional?) uses of a prevailing wind I've seen.
The trees make an hour glass shape (you can see
here), so the wind speeds at the pinch point are orders of magnitude stronger than at the tee. A long narrow green works with this by allowing the player some wiggle room with distance (wind is a bit random after all), but absolutely zero room for error on target line. Anything that isn't hit dead straight is in trouble.
So, if you're giving yourself a jet lag day in the city, or a few hours before you need to be at the airport, and you really want to play, it might be worth popping over, otherwise, yea, go to Fife. Same goes for the absolutely ridiculous (mostly into the wind)
596 yard finisher at Silverknowes, good times, but I wouldn't waste a round at a place like the New Course playing one of these townie parkland spots, except maybe for a bit of nostalgia.