A series of articles, entitled "The Making of a Putting Green," appeared in American Golfer in 1914-1915. The opening paragraphs made me think about the appearance of the so-called "green complex" in golf course architecture and its impact on course design, construction, and cost ...
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Up to a period of fifty years ago, the putting green was (as far as grass is concerned) a part of the fair green, merely cropped rather shorter by the sheep -- which constituted the only lawn mowers used up to that time.
Putting greens were not especially planted or made. They were merely parts of the fair green selected because of their proper distance from the tees and because of the natural conformation of the ground at this point was suited to putting.
It was only after the invention of lawn mowers that the putting green began to be treated materially differently from the fair green. And even today, at the old St. Andrews course in Scotland, many of the putting greens merge almost imperceptibly into the fair green.
Now, however, practically all over the world, when a new golf course is built, the putting greens are made as a separate element of the course, independent of the fair green. They are generally especially graded so as to have carefully designed slopes and convolutions to insure a pleasing variety in the contours of the greens and to demand more skill on the part of the golfer.
Very generally now, also, the putting green is sown with especial care -- a finer and more expensive grade of grass being used here than on the fair green.
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I.
So how did the introduction of the green complex change golf and golf architecture?
And why was it introduced in the first place?
Did it make golf more difficult? fun? challenging?
Did it make golf course construction more expensive?
What architects led the transition from putting green to green complex?
II.
Come up with a list of five (5) highly regarded courses and their architects, one with putting greens (A) and one with green complexes (B).
How do they differ in character?
How many would be classified as ideal? As fun or quirky? As extraordinarily tough or difficult?
Which list would you rather play, A or B?