Here are some photos of West Bend's Langford front nine, courtesy of RJ Daley, who took them, and Mike McGuire, who opened his course to the GCA crowd for the fall '07 Wisconsin Langford tour, with some comparisons to Lawsonia bunkering and mounding:
#1 -- a terrific opener, uphill all of the way to a fortess-like green (par 4, 420, 405, 304 --yardages from tips, blues, and whites). In the second of the two photos you can see right-center a typical Langford mound that (presumably) was planned as a bunker? I don't know if there are greenside bunkers here not filled in; I'm not sure this hole needs any greenside bunkers, IMHO, as the steep greenside falloffs provide plenty of trouble.
Sand-filled fairway bunker at Lawsonia's par 5 11th:
The approach at #2 (par 4, 406, 395, 342); I'd focus on tree removal here first, esp. the ones on the left. But also a good candidate for some greenside bunkering. In defense of the non-native pine trees on the right, they do provide some protection for the wayward approach from the 2nd fairway for golfers on the tee of #3, which runs parallel to and in the opposite direction of #3. The backside falloff on this green is something to behold -- a larger drop-off, by my estimation, than the boxcar par 3 7th at Lawsonia.
Here's what greenside bunkering might look like -- this is Lawsonia's short par 4 8th (Lawsonia photos courtesy of Dan Moore's definitive Lawsonia thread):
WEst Bend #3 (par 5, 520, 510, 438) -- a slightly bending par 5; here's a classic Langford mound/grassy bunker that cuts in on the right side of the fairway, if I recall, at about 300 yards?
Similar mounding confronts the golfer at Lawsonia's short par 5 5th hole; Lawsonia as well has several mound-type bunkers that are not filled with sand.
Two looks at the 3rd green at WB; the green is bi-sected by a left-to-right fault line that might be the steepest in the Langford canon -- it's larger than the fault line on the green of the par 3 12th at Lawsonia. I'd certainly think this is a candidate for some greenside bunkering:
For comparison, here's the greenside bunkering at Lawsonia's 17th, a similar-looking green complex:
Two looks at the par 3 4th hole at West Bend (217, 201, 154) that to me is reminiscent of both Lawsonia's 10th (a long par 3 of well over 200 yards with an enormous green) and its 17th, a par 4 of merit built on undistinguished land. Here the play is over dead-flat land to a tilted and very large green, nearly 9,000 square feet, with some elaborate mounding that needs to be carried. This is a solid, tough hole that I think would be made all the better with some sand bunkering.
#6 is a par 5 (557, 551, 403) over rambling land featuring kettles and moraines that are prominent in this area of Wisconsin (West Bend is quite close to Erin Hills, which uses natural glacial features as a central component of the course). This is one of Mike's pet projects; the original hole design, if I recall correctly, suggests a line of play left of where the fairway is cut, but which would require some extensive tree removal. Note several (relatively) newly planted trees left and right of the fairway here.
The 6th green, another candidate for greenside bunkering.
Right greenside bunkering at Lawsonia's par 3 14th, similar to the 6th at WB in that the green is nestled among trees.
#7, my favorite hole on the front nine at West Bend, and one Mike says is the members' favorite as well. A terrific short-medium par 4 (361, 349, 322) that doglegs left to a fairway with few level lies and an approach to a real fortress of a green. Cut entirely out of native hardwood oak and maple forests; one wonders how Langford even found this hole. Here's the tee shot into the afternoon sun, with two classic Langford gull-wing bunkers confronting the player off the tee.
Here's sand-filled gull-wing fairway bunkers at Lawsonia (first photo of the par 5 9th, taken from the 7th tee with 8th green in foreground; second photo of the par 4 17th):
Past the gull-wing bunkers at West Bend's 7th, to the dramatically uphill green. Don't know if this hole has greenside bunkering plans; I'd certainly put sand in those gull-wing fairway bunkers, ala the 9th or 17th at Lawsonia.
WB #8, a terrific little par 3 (159, 138, 130) played entirely in the woods, with sand bunkering already in place:
WB #9, a par 5/4 (depending on the tees one uses; 445, 471, 410), with magnificant en echelon grass bunkers confronting the play on the rolling fairway of this downhill hole:
Note the parallels to the en echelon bunkers at Lawsonia's 13th: