I love brown and fast and low inputs, etc., but not for $500 on something that is supposed to be insanely over the top. Maybe with the sort of Southeastern look that Shadow Creek appears to be trying to pull off, they feel the winter maintenance practice of overseeding ought to parallel it for the full effect. or not.
Those saturated photos that matt cohn posted are what I believe this course is trying to achieve, and it is what I would expect in playing there. I believe in minimal construction and maintenance, aesthetically keeping with the native environment, and affordable golf for the people, but not here. For just one golf course, and only one, I want to see the absolute maximum that man, machine, and money is capable of creating, if for nothing more than simple curiosity.
I don't think the complete effect will be achieved for another 50 or so years, depending upon the growth vigor of the many pines in the desert setting. Only when those pines become mature specimen trees will the feeling of seclusion in a Southeastern (or wherever) forest dominate the golfer's experience and maybe block out those barren desert mountains a little more. As of its look right now, I don't fully buy it or feel distant from the desert.