I know that I'm going to get destroyed for this-It appears as though Doak and Co. tried too hard to make the bunekrs look natural-It almost look like someone with the paintgun had turrets.
Anthony, Maybe it is just a matter of taste, but I thought the bunkers turned out well, much better than I expected when I first saw the unfinished site. In particular, I was impressed with how well the bunkering tied into the natural landscape. Because of the strong contrast in color and irrigated area vs. dry areas, this isnt easy to do, but IMO the rugged bunkers brought enough of the rugged surrounds into the course so as to make the contrast work for, rather than against the course.
Keep in mind that the sand generally appears whiter than it really is in the photographs-- bringing the sand into proper color would have darkened out too much of the rest of the details.
Also the scale and elevation changes might be a little hard to understand in photos-- these are by no means little squiggly bunkers drawn on an otherwise lifeless canvas. For example, while the photo doesnt really do it justice, take another look at the landing area bunker on the three shot eighth hole . . .
The tiny left-handed golfer (hopelessly) trying to extricate himself from this bunker is actually 6'5." The bunker is at the bottom of a large, rugged wash which runs up into the mountains to the right, and continues across the fairway as a swale to the left. The golfer can only see the steep sided wall of the wash and is probably around 25 feet below the level of the fairway directly in front of him.
This same huge bunker is hardly noticeable just below dead center in this photo taken from the 7th tee.
This photo also shows one of my favorite bunkers on the course, the one coming off the front left portion of the 7th green and tumbling down into the steep and deep wash which isn't really even visible in the photo. The sand surface itself is contoured and very much three dimensional, following the natural flow of the landscape down into oblivion.
Here are a few more photos where I was trying to capture how the edging bunkers were built into the surrounds even in more mundane locations.