K,
I'd debate your points 2 and 5. Sounds like you'd like the options too easy or provide bailouts for missed shots. Seems to me that would detract fro the challenge of the hole and the pride that should go with accomplishment.
Well, by definition, a driveable par four is going to be a 3.5, so the "challenge" is in making a three, isn't it?
My point wasn't that it should offer an easy bailout for 4 or even 5. But I've seen more-or-less driveable par fours that are SO punishing on missed shots that in stroke play rounds no one is tempted go for it.
The 15th at TPC River Highlands (
http://www.tpc.com/private/river_highlands/hole_15.html) is a decent example, IMHO.
It plays 285-295 when the pros are there, and it really tempts them to go for the green. Bobby Weed was in attendance a couple years ago, and ended up in the booth during the broadcast. He said he had been out at 15 watching the pros to see how it held up with today's equipment.
He said something like, "I watched several players put their hand on three or four clubs before they pulled one. That's what we're trying to do, put indecision into the minds."
That hole does exactly what I suggest in 2 and 5.
It's a simple layup, so players have to choose between a the temptation of being able to drive the green and the obvious advantages of laying back to their ideal distance.
It not closely guarded on all sides so players have room both short and right to bail out without taking penalty stroke. But if they do, getting up and down requires an extraordinarily good shot.
In fact, I think it meets all five of my criteria, including the admonition about easy up-and-downs in #5.
Anyway, not every hole on the course has to be hard.... <grin>
(EDIT) I just went back and read your original post again... I think you and I agree completely on what a good driveable par four should be. Truly enticing, with the punishment for a mistake reasonable enough to maintain the temptation.
Perhaps my 10 handicap mentality, and the fact that I play about 90% of my golf with women of varying abilities makes me a little more likely to see the value in offering alternatives to massive trouble around the green on such a hole.
I'd use tightly mowed swales where possible, because they bedevil the scratch man hoping to get up and down for birdie, while allowing the long handicap player a chance to get down in three without having to hit a lob wedge.
K