"I believe it wins the SH vs NGLA taste test, and, if you look at the blood lines of the clubs that emanated from CBM, SR and CB, they remain not only popular, but, well regarded by those who rate/rank golf courses. And, they've certainly withstood the test of time."
Funny though. The SHGC that Macdonald built only lasted 15 years. That didn't stand the test of time very well. Yes, the highway proposal had much to do with this but the course was so much improved and remains what it was meant to be 76 years later. In fact, I'd say SHGC made a mistake in hiring Macdonald if Macdonald had no intentions of ever building a better course than NGLA as I have been told was his intention. As for being highly regarded by those that rate/rank courses, you can allow them to dictate success and judge greatness, I'd rather not.
I think we should stop comparing NGLA to SHGC on this thread for the sake of the point of this thread, namely the subtle difficulty of SHGC. However, the difficulty at NGLA is more apparent and that is a point worth making.
Few Macdonald, Raynor and Banks courses are what they once were in terms of championship golf. From what I have seen, they were not built with elasticity in mind, so that is a test of time that was not passed in terms of championship quality. Elasticity has kept SHGC challenging for all classes of players from whichever tee they play. Even when built, the multiple tees at SHGC offered a variety of play for all classes of golfers than the single tees of NGLA could. Women enjoyed SHGC from the very start and still do today. It is not too difficult a test of golf for all classes of players. It is enjoyable difficulty, a hallmark of Flynn designs.
"You forget that golf is a game, conducted on a field of play that is specially prepared for that endeavor. And, in that context, CBM, SR and CB succeeded royaly."
Gosh, you're right. I completely forgot that
Actually, their courses are interesting to play but are not appealing to me from an aesthetic point of view. You cannot change my mind yet I appreciate your argument. So maybe we should get back to the SHGC concept. The next question you ask starts to do that as SHGC is one of the most natural golf courses you can play. Granted, the 7th is not, but Flynn had to fix that hole and that's what resulted
"So what, since when is embracing naturalism the ultimate goal of architecture ?"
Naturalism offers a sense of peace and harmony; a pastoral retreat. The architecture is enhanced when it blends into the immediate and distant surrounds. When combined with outstanding strategy through the green and the greens themselves (which are usually more subtle resulting in a longer learning curve) then the golfer is closer to nature and further from the man-made. That is a more pleasing aesthetic to me. It doesn't have to be to others. Aren't you at all curious why MacKenzie, Colt, Flynn, Thomas and others evolved a natural style far from the prevailing steeplechase golf and Macdonald and especially Raynor and Banks did not? Do you think that Raynor not being a golfer had a lot to do with template designs and a lack of originality? They may have worked on some sites, but his dedication to it is unusual on others.