We just restored our Biarritz at Hackensack (Banks) putting back the front bunkers (which were taken out during WW II), deepening the swale, and mowing the front section to green height (which took about 3 years to begin to play like a true green.) We did lots of research, and this is what I believe:
When first built in the 1920's, the front sections were never putting surfaces, but they did not need to be. Without irrigation systems, these extremely long par 3's required a low running shot (called a Biarritz shot) hit hard enough to go down and up the swale with just the right force. Remember, there was no aerial game back then, no one flew it to the pin.
I think all Biarritz'z should be altered so the front section is green height, but the pin should NEVER be there, (except Mondays and Tuesdays
). Keeping the front section as putting green is the only way to create an approach that is fast and firm enough to allow the roll required to make the hole play as a Biarritz should play. What fairway plays as fast as a putting green?
We also added a new back tee so the hole can play 250-260, so only the longest players can fly it to the pin, but they really risk knocking it over. It is far harder to control your distance with a 3-wood than a long iron.
The pin should NEVER be in the swale! That is just goofy.
I can tell you that our hole is SO much more fun now. So many balls roll up, and then back down the swale. The putts from the swale are really tricky. I would never want to see us go back to fairway height grass.
I also should add that this change was by far the most controversial in a full course restoration plan that passed a membership vote 188-9. I doubt that the Biarritz change would have passed on its own. So many people found this hole to be "odd" and not like anything they have ever played before. (Five years ago, when I knew NOTHING about golf course architecture and Macdonald, I too thought it ws a crazy idea.) Few people really cared about the lineage of this hole from Banks to Raynor to Macdonald. I have good friends who really disliked the changes. But what has been so cool to observe is how the hole is catching on! Players who could not reach with driver are now getting enough roll to make it up the swale. When the pin is on the back but cut close to the swale, players have putted from past the pin back down the swale. There is a brand new element of randomness that has been added to the course now, and I think in time it will become a favorite of many members.