After playing High Pointe recently, I have to say that I'm more intrigued by CommonGround than virtually any other course being constructed today...certainly more so than the "big" projects at Tetherow, Rock Creek, and even Sugarloaf Mountain and Olde Macdonald.
I say this because much more so than the latter, I think the former really needs to be the model of golf going forward if the game is to grow and thrive. By that I mean we need reasonable, affordable, sanely designed public courses close to large population centers, and we need them to be inexpensive to build and maintain.
To me, this is much more of a challenge to the skills of an architect than some wild outlands property and a nearly unlimited budget and grandiose landforms to play with.
I'm especially intrigued because CommonGround is on flattish ground, which is much more common than interesting land.
I've often wondered why the model of Garden City couldn't be built almost anywhere, although GCGC does have the advantage of sandy soil. Still, simply looking at it from a minimalistic, strategically interesting course on boring terrain, it should serve as a model we can learn from.
My hope is that CommonGround is perhaps a scaled-back model that others can emulate going forward. I was already considering heading to Colorado next summer on a golf trip before I knew that this was being built. This cinches it.