Bcrosby- I think I can build 18 USGA greens c $500,000 based on an average 500 sqM. if you break the USGA material aspect down (250mm rootzone/ 50mm grit / 100mm shingle) id say $350,000 is for materials
Brian- Yes rejected mainly because they do not conform to USGA guidelines, often because of the fines but sometimes because they are not stable, or are the wrong particle shape, high ph. I am not always talking sands native to the site, sometimes sales people say .... we have this sand and when I get it specced, it fails.
Don - I have very little knowledge on Southern turfgrasses so I can't really comment.What you are saying makes sense though. In the UK we are quite restricted what we can grow.
Sands are natural and conforming sands will be native to some land obviously, I only know of three bands in England & Wales where this occurs; Cheshire, c Bounemouth and Leyton Buzzard.
If I was building a links course I probably would use a USGA method. The only complaint I hear about Kingsbarns is the greens, I have not seen them so its second hand info. I am not against using native sands/ soils if they are there ofcourse, I probably would stick a raft in and use the native soil on top.
In the UK we have had quite a lot of litigation situations where new greens have not performed. When these situations go to court the reason is very often 'incorrect materials used'. I know of lots of greens from the 70s that need/ are being rebuilt because of compromising the spec. I have built quite a lot of greens since maybe 1982 and have built them to low specs with nearly right materials and the 1987 USGA spec (which I still largely use) I have no doubt which one is better. Equally I have never found the right sand on site.