Pat -
I am very familiar with Atlantic and wanted to respond to your thread. On balance, I think the changes are for the better. In particular, the work behind greens #5, 6, 7, 14 and 17 are a big improvement - the best being the one behind #5 where the backdrop is really the horizon.
However, I am disappointed with the additional teeing areas. Prior to the native grasses growing in, they looked like small runway strips to me. Now that the grasses have come-in, the effect is more subtle but I still find tees like #3 to be obnoxious (how many tees do you need within 5 yards of one another for a 340 yard par 4?). At a golf course where the average member cannot break 100, I cannot for the life of me understand why they needed to add length to the course. After all, I don't think we have 5 members who can honestly break 80 from the middle tees.
One has to wonder about these things. Atlantic did not fall out of the top 100 because it was too short. Rather, it fell out of the top 100 because it never belonged. Most people I bring there come back with the same criticisms / concerns:
1) The Fescue with the bluegrass undreneath is terrible
2) Many of the holes look the same
3) With a few exceptions, the course has no "character" holes
4) The bunkers are in no way strategic
5) The routing is poorly conceived
If we are honest with one another for a moment, Rees did an "average job" with a pretty good piece of land. Don't get me wrong, Pat. I like playing the course. However, when I think about the money it cost (over $225 k all in for a membership) and the end result, I just cannot think about Atlantic the way I think about Sand Hills, Bandon, Kohler, Friar's, the River Course, the Ocean Course and so on and so on.
Long story short, I like the changes to the approach shots but I still think that Atlantic is what it is: a good golf course that has an identity crisis. To quote an old poet:
"Above the good how far; but far below the great..."