Paul,
But weren't the proponents of the "modern style' in the 1950's; cock sure they had the "final answer" in design? Wasn't the beehive hairdo the be all end all in its time? Elvis was always going to be the biggest ever?
I know pop culture just craves something different, and better than the last time around, as well. (Such as retro baseball stadiums with all the modern amenities.
So, I am pretty sure minimalism is out of style someday. Maybe a tottering old Bill Coore will do one more for the ages. Don't laugh. I knew clients who hired RTJ in his 80's desperately hoping he would pass away and they would have his last golf course.....
Just spitballing here, but if there were trends, artificial turf might be on of them, but not on large areas becauase it loses its cooling effect.
I am with whoever said that golf courses on tougher sites will be the norm, and the trend to great sites in the late 90's was just an aberration of wealth. Next time, the governments will be more organized and more against coast line golf.
I hope there is some kind of label that makes a sub 7000k course acceptable. Maybe keep the championship label for recreational golf courses, but add some sort of platinum status to courses that actually hold championships, to accelerate a trend towards easier courses.
I do easily predict more market specific courses, so no more 7000k courses in retirement communities.....
But again, I think there will be classic courses in the 2050's too. And they may look like courses today, or something totally new.
Lastly, given the love of retro, I can see one of the next big things to be a 50's retro course, or 60-70's retro, maybe based on Innisbrook free form style. After remodeling La Costa, I got a lot more respect for Dick Wilson......I am not so sure we will go back to Robert Bruce Harris clam shell bunkers for easier maintenance, though. The basic cost saving principles are back in vogue, but maintenance machinery is much better. So, the same easy maintenance criteria will be in place, but the results will be tuned and different based on today's conditions.
I call that a 'Sincere" design, one that addresses the exact needs of that site and client. I doubt that aspect ever changes too much. At least I hope there is no more McDonald's approach where one size fits all....