The brief discussion on the narrow greens topic regarding this caught my attention, and I thought it deserved its own thread.
Reading golf architecture classic books, architects (my favorite book is Thomas, which seems to speak more directly) say that each hole should present a different look and challenge.
And yet, most golfers are quick to say that "that green wasn't like the rest of them" or similar comments, seemingly wanting "conformity" to a certain size range for greens, bunker style, tee style (rectangular vs free form vs round) on each course.
My feeling is that for most couses, the holes are too much alike, rather than too much different, in play certainly, and in aesthetics probably.
Focusing on play, can we have too much variety? What is wrong with a course with greens of sizes from 4000-14,000 SF, with perhaps only one tiny tim and one goliath, but with all sizes in between, then some long and skinny, wide and shallow, round, freeform, contours varying from flat to horrendous, etc.
I know Tour players look at a course and see "shots" whereas designer types see "features"; as I describe, but these variations affect play - narrow greens ask a golfer to hit straight, shallow ones ask for distance accuracy, and other types can encourage a run up shot, high spin, tenative vs agressive putting, missing in the wrong spot or right spot, etc.
I could go on, but is variety for variety's sake too much? Why not get a good dose of different type shots in one round?