Jeremy Glenn mentions the word 'unconvetional'. I think most of the world's GREAT courses can be described as 'unconventional'. Merion and Pacific Dunes included.
Obviously, the reason so few GREAT courses have been designed and constructed over the past half century, is because too many architects are afraid to go against convention. No one, I don't think, knows this better than Tom Doak, of course.
Anyway, I think if the so-called 'short' holes are natural, unqiue and exciting to play, very few golfers will even notice they just played 3-4 short holes in a row, unless they study the scorecard. Particularly on a seaside links, where the wind is going to make one or two of those 'short' holes not so short some days.
One of my favourite stretches of holes is 8-10 at Highlands Links. 8 plays about 330, up and over a ridge with a downhill shot into a relatively large, fall-away green. 9 is a modified version of an Alps hole, about 320 yards long or so, where you drive down into a valley then play blind, up and over a ridge to a slender green tucked into a natural dell. And 10 is a drop shot par 3 some 115 yards long, with a large green that features some really neat, subtle contour that sometimes undetectably complicates putting.
These 3 holes on the scorecard read something like, 330, 320, and 115 yards. But no one I know thinks, geez, why did Stanley Thompson layout three short holes in a row? The holes are so natural, so diverse, and so interesting to play that who could care they all measure 'short' in each respective par category?