TEPaul,
Looking at a budget can be deceiving.
As an example, many, if not most golf clubs prefer to upgrade their irrigation system while undertaking a project, be it a restoration, renovation or modernization, so sometimes a million to 1.5 million might be in the budget.
The club might also decide to repair their bunkers after 80 years of useage, without changing their location or configuration, so that might add anywhere from 400,000 to 700,000 to the project.
The club might also decide that their tees are grossly inadequate for the increased volume of play 80 years after the tees were originally built. Expanding the tees, and perhaps lengthening the tees without changing angles of attack can run a few hundred thousand as well, depending on circumstances.
So now you have a project approaching 3 million just in three basic areas, so the size of the budget might not, on the surface, tell the entire story.
But, I would agree with Tom Doak, in general, that size does matter
With respect to phoning the architect or club, I'm not so sure that an architect would want to share what might be deemed confidential information. In additon, you'll usually get that architect's opinion, which may not reveal the entire story.
Likewise, talking to those in power at the club may not reveal the necessary information you seek. I think you have to be intimately involved with the process to understand what really took place. Otherwise, you're like the judge listening to the couple who's getting divorced, you'll never really ascertain what, where and why things went wrong.
I'm not so sure that Tom MacWood is asserting that "everything" should be put back the way it was.
I think tee lengthening is universally accepted, by architects and golfers, as within the framework of the theory of elasticity, provided angles of attack and methods of play aren't changed.
I may be wrong, but I think Tom MacWood's perspective is one of enlightened suspicion when a club, architect or third party declares that they're going to restore their golf course.
And, I think he's right about that.
The first thing I would ask you, when you posture the merits of an interpretive restoration, is, who's doing the interpreting ?
That's a critical issue.
And, is that interpretation universal, or practically universal ?
That's also a critical issue.
I can't speak for GMCC or any other club, but all too often, like bills before Congress, amendments get attached to well intended plans, and those amendments, usually the whims of political interest groups or factions within a club, result in a deviation from a true or sympathetic restoration, and quite often disfigure the design integrity of the golf course.
So, I lean more in Tom MacWood's direction on proposed restorations, not having the blind faith that you seem to espouse, that any project, cloaked in the term, "restoration" is automatically a worthy project.
Lastly, I totally disagree with your last paragraph.
When a large scale project has been undertaken, and I'm talking about the financial end, and it's recognized that the work on a given hole or a few holes didn't turn out so well, it's usually ten to fifteen years before money will be alloted to "FIX" the problem. And, memberships usually feel, that if the current people in charge screwed it up, they're not going to let those same people try to fix it.