In the August 2005 Esquire, Tom Doak is mentioned along with his highly touted New Zealand golf course Cape Kidnappers. It states as follows;
"Most of the best new golf courses in the world are the result of a new school of minimalist design that began with Sand Hills in remotest Nebraska. Tom Doak is at the forefront of this minimalist philosophy. His Pacific Dunes, in Oregon, was ranked one of the top fifty courses in the U.S. the day it opened. Minimalism is helped along by great pieces of land, and, in our ever-shrinking world, great land can be hard to come by. Doak's most recent courses redefine the word remote: Getting to Cape Kidnappers requires an eighteen hour flight to Auckland, followed by a puddle jumper and a car ride. It's not the destination by the journey, right? In this case, the destination is extraordinary: views of the Pacific from every hole, a 450-foot drop from edge of fairway to ocean, an endless string of peaks, ridges, and gullies untouched by bulldozers. And when you're done, the rest of New Zealand is yours."
Would someone offer a good and simple GCA definition of Minimalism here? And is minimalism the most popular form of golf architecture today as the piece above suggests? Can it be accomplished with a poor site? If it can, I wonder what are good examples.
Cape Kidnappers Golf Course