Tom MacWood writes:
Considering MacKenzie's philospophy, do you think the bunker was part strategic and part to save those poor souls who might find the barranca? I'm only reasonably familiar with four of the good doctors' original designs, Pasatiempo, Valley Club of Montecito, Cypress Point (thanks to Geoff's book) and Augusta (thanks to Frank Christian's book.)
It does seem like Mackenzie used the saviour bunker more than most designers. Thinking about Pasatiempo, there are bunkers to the left of the second green, right of the third green, left of the fourth, long on the seventh, left on the ninth, before the barranca on the left side of the fairway on 11th, on the left side of the fairway on 13, left on 15, right on 16 and short of the green on 18. These all either protected balls from going into barranca or rolling down steep slopes.
I can think of a few similar bunkers on Cypress and Valley Club and a couple at Augusta.
"Most golfers have an erroneous view of the real object of hazards. The majority of them simply look upon a hazard as a means of punishing a bad shot, whereas the real object is to make the game more interesting."
--Alister Mackenzie