I believe MacKenzie's long par-4's and his par-5's are pretty good. 13th at ANGC is considered by many to be the finest par-5 design in golf. 8 and 16 at Crystal Downs, 10th at Pasatiempo, the 8th at ANGC, 5th at New South Wales, 2nd, 5th, 6th and 10th at CPC off the top of my head. 5th at ANGC, 13th Crystal Downs, 11th ANGC, 3rd Valley, 12th at CPC and it appears there are a ton of long par-4s in Melbourne that are quite strong. And completely ignored his best work in the UK, which I'm not as familar with...not to mention his Lido design and remodel of the 8th at PBGL. He compares with any architect of his era, of any era.
3. There should be little walking between greens and tees...(MacKenzie successfully met this principle...despite one or two exceptions)
6. There should be a minimum of blindness for the approach shots. (Again successful as far as I can tell)
10. There should be a complete absence of the annoyance of and irritation caused by the necessity of searching for lost balls. (Ditto)
What is interesting, he came up with these principles in 1911 or 1912. At least that is the first reference to his principles I have found...they may go back even further. Although he did consistantly follow these general principles, I don't get the impression he was a slave to them.
I thought Nicklaus collaborated with Dye at Lake Geneva.