Man, that is one good post you wrote there Les! You have all the elements and ingredients down pat to do something like a bunkerless course! You even threw in the absolutely necessary FIRM and FAST "maintenance meld", that in my opinion would be the overridingly essential ingredient to carry something like this off really well.
For a bunkerless course to work well the firm ground and the shapes of it would almost have to step into the place of the bunker feature to be the essential feature for strategic purposes.
In my post above on this topic I was thinking of a bunkerless course not just to use something else to step into the place of the bunker for strategic purposes though.
I was thinking about a bunkerless course more to acheive what Behr and Hunter and some of the others may have thought could be the "ideal" in golf architecture someday by doing a golf course with a setting that was completely natural to the original natural setting so the golfer might feel he was playing golf on a course that almost didn't seem like one.
They mentioned that ironically the SAND bunker made that difficult as it was an unnatural feature to so many natural settings simply because it was an odd vestige unique to the old linksland that just happened to have made itself essential to golf architecture, for some reason. So ironically to take the sand bunker out of some settings and sites would therefore tend to make the site and the course look more natural!
I think that's true! Not that I don't like sand bunkering, I just think they had a great point there to acheive something interesting and extremely natural!
There is another supreme irony in this line of thinking too, that I find fascinating. That is that bunkering is a feature that should be avoided because of the problems of playing out of it but according to Behr it was also a feature used ultimately to "prick the player's senses" and find other ways to go!
Far from being in anyway restricting to golfers Behr felt this "sensation pricking" sparked a strategic sense of FREEDOM actually. Ultimately Behr didn't seem so interested in what happened to the golfer if he got in a bunker, he seemed far more interested in all the great things that a golfer would think of and do just because they happened to be there to avoid. This is his "lines of charm" philosophy!
But it is true that functioning as even Behr perceived them sand bunkers certainly were a VISUAL spur to create strategic inspiration.
And since at this point in golf architecture's evolution sand bunkers are now almost essential, removing them might be considered radical athough ironically they are unnatural (to many sites).
I would take this a step farther and a very radical step at that. I might think about just minimizing the golf features remaining, the greens and the toporaphy itself with sort of a general blend into naturalness. This might force the golfer then to really search the site for strategic ways to go. This would essentially take away even Behr's "sensation pricking" for strategic inspiration that he believed bunkers acheived.
The golfer would then have to go it on his own without out any road map at all! What could be better to produce "strategic freedom" than that--the ultimate thing that Behr was trying to acheive.
Of course the ground and the topography would then have the overall meaning and would have to effect the golf ball positively and negatively (rewards/risks). It would just be harder to figure out how and why that might happen. What better way could there be to inspire or even force the golfer into a strategic sense and total freedom? And I would make it anything but bland, although it could and would be extremely "site natural".
It would probably never be accepted but it is an interesting idea to contemplate!