What holes best highlight the effect of the prevailing wind on the play of the hole (I like 12 at Augusta National).
How often do architects consider the effect of the prevailing wind direction when constructing a hole/routing a course, and which architects were particularly good at utilizing the most common weather conditions in their architecture?
I think the challenge of Augusta 12 is the swirling winds, which are harder to estimate than a constant prevailing wind, and caused by the openings in the tall pines.
gca's have always considered wind, and it seems more and more detailed now. Here is a summary of the highlights, as I generally recall them:
Routing Consideration - Muirfield in Scotland was supposedly laid out in triangulated form to assure wind was different on every hole.
Features Consideration - Most feature design on Scottish courses recognizes that the wind affects approach shots and leaves wide openings.
Later, when modern golf pros got involved, here are some concepts I have heard them espouse as good design -
Long holes into the wind, short with, to provide effective playing distance variety.
Design greens with the prevailing wind in mind to make shots "doable" - i.e. -
downwind, lengthen green to account for reduced spin,
into wind, they may be shallower.
Cross winds, -
widen green
angle with the prevailing wind to allow shot shaping
I try to follow those general ideas, with the caveat that I can trust prevailing winds about as much as a riverboat gambler. If every green was designed to the same formula, whenever a different wind arose, the course could be unplayable. I tend to leave a little more wiggle room like the old guys in Scotland did on most greens than those pros would suggest is necessary.
Here in Texas, our summer and winter winds are 180 degrees different, and can be quite strong. Thus, a green playing into the prevailing summer breeze, shallow depth with a fronting pond might play fine in summer, but be impossible to hold in winter. In other places like Chicago, where the wind blows somewhere from the west most of the time (with about 10% off the lake winds in spring) its possible to align greens more to the formula.
Thus, depending on how constant the wind is, I follow the land more even when it contradicts the "formula" and figure if a third or so of the greens play better in off winds it makes the course that much better and creates different shot patterns, rather than always following the wind. If wind isn't a huge factor on a site, I follow the land completely.
I would be surprised if Raynor consciously routed a course with wind in mind, being a non golfer. I bet the land just offered him those cross wind holes.
I would NOT be surprised if Tom Doak or other gca's come on here and completely debunk "Brauer's second wind theory" (my first involves White Castle hamburgers and is not relevant to this discussion.....) as completely worthless.