Thanks for pointing out the obvious!
....
Until your post, I would have never thought to think of RTJ as the Tom Bendelow of his generation! Grahted golfer standards continued to rise, as early golfers were satisfied with much less.
Jeff, You've discovered my secret power, Master of the Obvious!
Unfortunately, the Tom Bendelow reference is lost on me, so I'll take it as a compliment.
Tom Paul's original premise is a Renaissance movement in GCA, using the Golden Age as the model. Much of this recent thread, IMHO, has seen praise along with greater historical context for the work of the 50's and 60's boom, an era that at times is stereotyped as bland or insipid, at other times blamed for the deconstruction of the GA works.
To Tom's points, here in 2011, everyone with any love of GCA would agree that the courses bequeathed to us from the GA should be treasured, preserved, and maintained to capture the spirit of their intent. Their aren't going to be any more of them built, and they are important historically, and enjoyable today, too.
What to me is more interesting, and speaks to what Kris is saying about "responsible" design, is what would be/are the attributes of a Renaissance GCA. Looking to the GA, and also to some of the comments about the better work of the 50's and 60's, the work that made the golf boom possible, and that leaves us with many courses still relevant today, especially in the muni/public space, is it possible to boil down the qualities that would define a Renaissance GCA?
I'd propose:
Strategic Qualities/Playability (including all of the qualities of routing, interest, challenge, variety from hole to hole, day-to-day, and across skill levels)
Economy
Style
Walkability
What it would not include would be:
Naturalistic
Site
Houses
Everyone gets Strategic Qualities. To me this is a large part of the Craft of Golf architecture, and the imperative to honor the unique opportunity to speak to the end users/consumers, the golfers.
Economy, to me, involves both the hidden side of GCA: removing water, sustainable practices, affordability (where the GCA decisions impact this), etc. I'm sure the professionals on here take this part to heart. This is the Profession of GCA.
Style should not be confused with stylish. Raynor bunkers, Ross greens, Dye RR Ties; these are affectations of the GCA's style, and to the extent that GCA is Art, these qualities should be honored and encouraged in any GCA Renaissance.
Walking, though not as fundamental as the other dimensions, should be a priority where possible. Sure, some sites aren't suited for it, but designing unwalkable courses on sites that could support takes away an important part of the experience for many.
I love Naturalistic settings, but I wouldn't make a prerequisite of a Renaissance style. Instead, I see that as an expression of Style, and in some cases a means to Economy, but not the only means or direction to reach either.
Great sites tee the ball up for great courses, no doubt about it. But a Renaissance GCA should not be limited by the quality of the site. If golf can be played on a piece of land, a Renaissance Architecture should bring about an excellent course.
Finally Houses. The business model behind many courses is Real Estate. I'm sure there are a lot of good or even great courses out there that wouldn't exist if there weren't some plots backed up to the fairway. But, I've never felt that a course was made better by a closeup view of 1000 grills, pools, and lanais.
If I've managed to capture the obvious again, I've done what I set out to do!
Dave