I was all ready to post a reply on this thread last night and then the whole of the north of Scotland had a power cut due to the weather. Springtime in Scotland indeed !
Ross/Sean/Simon,
I agree totally about Renaissance flying under the radar for most club golfers in Scotland never mind the rest of the UK. I will admit that many years ago when the development was first muted I was against the elitist idea as it was presented then in the media but once you've been there and met the individuals concerned that becomes less of an issue, or maybe I'm just easily corrupted
To answer the original question, is the course under rated ? If that means is it under rated in comparison to other Doak courses then I can't say because this is the only one I've played. If the question is in comparison to other Scottish courses then maybe/maybe not. I think it is a very good course, and great fun to play. Whether its a great course depends on your definition of great but if this course was a hundred years old and had a similar history to North Berwick I have no doubt that it would be hailed as great.
Ally
Re your point 4, regarding parallel fairways, I actually saw that as a positive in a perverse sort of way. I asked Mike Savardi what his brief to the architect had been and he answered that they had asked Tom to produce a traditional Scottish design, a course which looked as though it had been around a hundred years (or at least that is my recollection of the gist of what he said). To me the parallel fairways are a throwback to old courses as was the scale of the place.
Given what I've read on here I was expecting super wide fairways but the course instead has a traditional feel and scale. Of course the parallel fairways and width of the fairways may just be a result of constraints to do with the size and shape of the site but whatwever I enjoyed the traditional feel and lack of bling. That lack of bling was no more evident than the par 3 at the top end of the site (13th ?) which faced away from the water and the best view in the property. Other GCA's would have probably found the temptation to use the view as a backdrop to the green too hard to resist, I know I probably would have. Again I could be giving Mr Doak too much credit there but either way the finished hole appeals to the good Scottish Calvinist in me.
Niall