I have been thumbing through a piece, "Practical Greenkeeping" by long-time European greenkeeper, Jim Arthur and came across a topic dubbed 'contour drainage condemned'. In this section of the Drainage chapter, Arthur correlates American design (up until the mid 90s) in more arid climates (California, Florida, Texas; the West and South) to that of engineer-designed highways in California:
" ... Anyone who has suffered from the total snarl up of traffic on a freeway in California for instance, which automatically follows a torrential if short storm, will know what I am talking about. There are no roadside drainage gullies, everything depends on runoff. Flooding, albeit temporarily, is the rule. Meanwhile, everything stops.
Courses are designed with massive earth moving operations, destroying natural drainage in the process, to shed water to a centre line of fairways, down which is run what is literally a sewer, with gratings at intervals to deal with the flow. The water is collected in storage lakes, doubling as the water features which seem such an intrinsic aspect of American design. Golf is not a water sport; water features are not easy to manage and the concept is, to the eye of the traditionalist, most unnatural."
He continues to discourage such principles by supporting his claim that this type of drainage in a different climate (that which has more humidity, primarily that of the UK, but I take it as the Northern US as well), also requires subsidiary drainage to help produce dry surfaces in the winter months when the soil is more saturated.
After speaking with a British turf intern (now on his way to becoming his own greenkeeper) I met from my days working maintenance at Oak Hill, I was informed that the book was used as the bible for turf students for a while, but now has been deemed outdated and principles that are no longer practiced to a large extent; instead, they now turn to Beard's book. I absolutely love Arthur's principles, for both maintenance and design, and thought this might be a good topic to throw up here.
More and more we are beginning to see surface drainage as opposed to (what I will say) the late 80s-90s style of thought in shaping and draining. (80s-90s style: think of most Dye, Nicklaus, Palmer, or even Hills courses you have been to with catch basins everywhere and countless yards of pipe that you know is connecting it all, eventually surfacing in one of the numerous water features) Are American architects now becoming more like their European counterparts? Is Arthur just completely wrong in this assumption and bold declaration and wasn't paying enough attention to the grassroots movement that is now en vogue?
I think that C&C's work at No. 2 with the irrigation system is (albeit, a long shot) a correlation of the aforementioned Arthur principle of surface drainage, only on the irrigation end. I have seen the Renaissance team work and they too are strong advocates of allowing water to run its natural course, attempting to minimize the use of plastic piping. I know Nuzzo is a strong advocate of these principles as well, which actually, most of the architects on this site are like-minded on this subject. But let us not forget the sites that C&C and Doak are most noted for having selected to work with; they're not necessarily clay soils in arid climates.
But, I digress back to the original topic at hand, is surface drainage a European design philosophy? Bendelow seemed to be one of the best at this (a European-American) along with a handful of the Golden Age designers, but they were predominantly immigrants from Europe without most of the means that were available post-WWII. Most of the design philosophies Arthur is attacking seem to be more of the post-WWII American architects, or at least that's how I take it.