I've started more than a few threads over the years on tinkering/restoring/renovating/remodeling golf courses.
The principal question, however, remains unchanged:
When is it okay to tinker?
And why do it?
It's always amazing to me to read many posters espousing the benefits of restoring, generally via "sympathetic restoration" (maintain the original architect's intent and look).
Similarly, the same posters generally criticise "restoration" architects who make major changes to holes.
Yet time and time again, the same folks look at a course and immediately know that X number of holes are bad, completely wrong, out of character and should be redone. Sometimes it's after many plays, sometimes it's after one (I find the latter particularly amusing, but sometimes the former makes sense).
Then you have more prominent people like Ron Whitten, who in one article both rips unnamed restoration experts and nominates other restoration experts as qualified to restore.
If someone can explain this all to me, well, you're a better man than me.
I'd love to hear from architects as to whether there's a breaking point that nudges them to remodel one of their own courses.