Adam,
For what its worth, your my vote for the Newbie of the Year. You have done more to raise the bar of posting then anyone of senority here, and I think it really means something. Thanks for your excellent contribution!
Most Accurate Quote of the Year goes to Tom Doak:
I can't stand to look at new architecture, because it all looks man-made to me.
This comes after his revelation, which I think he knew all along, he just hasn't said it for sometime.
Back to Adam,
Adam, being a newbie and all, and even more brave to claim lack of knowledge..............
From the standpoint of being a student of golf architecture, I think your question has some really interesting points that should be addressed.
I think there are too many architects that try to forge an environment in places where they don't belong--can't recognize a unique environment that may support outstanding architecture--thereby creating their designs based-off of one or a few modes or criteria. This is where they become formuliac. They have no idea how to create on the canvas given, let alone fit golf holes and their strategies on this canvas that is seperates in 18 individual parts that coincide with one another. A series of those parts may be of a different contrast then say the other half of that series, but it all comes together when the architect places it in the series of events that happen on that canvas. (or in this case golf course site)
Some of the best of these happenings are when they are of a quirky nature--others, when they just take it right to the senses. A perfect example of this is Capital of American Golf No, not the World Golf Village in Florida, but the Eastern end of Long Island--The National Golf Links of America and Shinnecock Hills--where two completel contrasting styles of architecture peacefully exist next to one another.
(Could this mean that Tom Doak is coming-through with a completely different and contrasting design to match this existing nature? A school of architecture not yet explorered? Let us indeed hope, because this might be HIS next level.)
Some years ago, I did a post called "Good Quarry/Bad Quarry" and since that time, I have learned a lot about golf architecture. I used two examples--Merion's Quarry, and how Hugh Wilson (Not to be confused with rapmaster, Huge "Puffy" Wilson) used the quarry to his benefit, not just on one hole but the three closing holes (one of the most demanding closing stretches in Golf in my honest opinion) and Tom Fazio's Black Diamond Ranch, which may have used the quarry for one or two holes, and not so much in play, but more for visual "ugly is beautiful" affect.
Now these are two completely contrasting elements--Merion in its rough-edged beauty that maybe slowly fading for a more manufactured, manicured look to Black Diamond Ranch , and the mastery of making a ugly rock quarry look beautiful from an esthetic standpoint. I do think this is the difference in the mindsets between many modern vs. most classical architects. (omiting my favored nations) These are two examples, in my opinon, of two distinct contrasting golf scenes and both are unique but different in their use of their quarries.
Now lets take a nasty step in contrast on the modern side.
The Quarry at La Quinta--another Tom Fazio design.
Not to take anything away from the QofLQ, but its contrasting beauty isn't at its quarry which from what I saw was nothing more then fake, manufactured boulders that are lining a former quarry wall. While that may look pretty and impressive to some, I think it ruins the opening holes because it just looks manufactured. It doesn't look artifical, but it just does have this manufactured feeling to it. Its not until you get out and away from that faux environment of streams, fake boulders and hilarious waterscapes that look like they belong at Disneyland; and on to holes #12, 13, 14, & 15 where the course does get to be interesting and really beautiful. But then the transistion from Santa Rosa Mountains to La Quinta lowlands takes place again, and the fake, artificial nature of the site just glaringly comes out so much that its embarassingly hokey.
What is seen here is a contrasting of naturally devised holes, which many features had to be cleverly constructed to un-naturally devised holes where nature was simply covered-up.
Simply put, it just doesn't work.
Now as far as strategies are concerned, I'm going to give you two places--one classical and the other modern where strategies, environment and GREANESS worthy of study occurs:
Riviera CC and Friars Head GC.
Here you have two sites completely different from one another, but at both sites the architect has masterfully created in the most contrasting nature 18 individual golf holes of individual character.
Both are great examples of the pure study of the Art of Golf Architecture.