Bullied? Really? Will the architects who participate on this site, or any and all in general, please stand up and be counted if they've felt BULLIED by the USGA into using their construction method?
Kyle:
I'm standing up here. Count me.
I am sure there are a lot of architects who have never dealt with this, because they are insecure about their knowledge of agronomy and only too happy to swallow the principles of USGA Green Construction hook, line and sinker. Xeroxing the USGA Greens Construction specs and sticking them in your spec book relieves you of all future liability for problems with greens. That's why everyone uses them ... not because architects think they are better. Most architects wouldn't know "better" soil mechanics if it hit them in the ass.
On the other hand, I've built greens out of native soils lots of times, and been fine with it, but on more than one occasion I have been pressured to build USGA greens. The one time I felt really "bullied" about it was at Sebonack. The entire site is great sand and we were happy to build EVERYTHING ELSE just on top of the native sand. But the superintendent [relying on his buddies the local USGA agronomists] and my co-designer insisted on USGA greens, and actually trucked sand from off-site to build them. We spent close to $1 million more than we should have [remember, it's Hamptons prices] because nobody on site was secure enough to just build with good local materials.
Now, maybe they believed that we needed to build a USGA green because they wanted a perched water table. Maybe. But none of them could explain to me what is the benefit of a perched water table. Can you? And can you explain why so many old greens without perched water tables are just fine if not better? Shinnecock is like a mile away, and their greens were built from the same native soils we would have used -- not good enough for you?
If I just came out and wrote what Armen did, all of the USGA guys would pile on me because I'm not an agronomist, I've never grown grass, etc. And I haven't. But here's the great thing -- Armen Suny IS an agronomist, and he was a superintendent for 15-20 years, and he was perfectly happy to take his construction methods and build his greens and then maintain them in perfect condition for years afterward. So you are going to have a hard time tearing him a new one.
Armen does skip over a few things in his piece, such as, the cost of his construction method is not free, either. But he makes his point, and that's what good writers do.