JK. I have spoken of it before, but I will mention the place again. There is a place where RTJsr golf course architecture and FLW building architecture come together as a comparison of style, form and function, as it were. The Springs golf course and the adjacent supperclub building, The Spring Green Restaurant. And I investigated buying them in 1988-9! Admittedly, more of a pipe dream than commitment to pull the trigger, but I explored the idea to the extent of obtaining all the offering materials, inspecting the facilities several times, and discussing the possiblities with potential partners.
front entrance
faces river
hard to find golf course photo
I am no expert on either FLW or RTJ, nor their design crafts. Who is? But, I thought I got the general idea in exploring each work. The course might be thought of as rather bland golf design in a spectacular setting. I played it for several years at least once a year. While the restaurant might be thought of as an impressive building within a natural blended setting with poor functionality as an operating restaurant operation in the efficient sense. The rumors are legendary of all the roof leaks and other structural questions. The R.E. sales person that showed it was very intent at steering me from obvious problems/questions I had, but since my family had been in the restaurant biz, I had some pretty good sense of what features were not well thought out as a commercial restuarant operation.
I'd say that of the RTJ golf courses I've seen on TV, I'd like them much more than the one I've played due to what appears to be more dramatic architecture in relation to golf strategy. I like RTJs tiered greens concepts. The one I've walked while viewing the PGA was Hazeltine. I found it to be a big beautiful course. That, after much design change from its original presentation that Dave Hill said was a 'perfectly good farm ruined' by RTJ. As to how the flowing spiral corridors of the Guggie is greater than the art that is in it, I'm not sure that is a slam at modern art, or do you think the building is that revolutionary and functional. But, to say RTJ's work is somehow a part of FLW's modernistic vanguard of design sensibilities still escapes me.