I wanted to bring up the environmental since it was brought up in the course profile as well as touch on the grass selection, which I will start with.
I'm amazed that Mr. Trump would use ryegrass for the golf course given his hopes that it may stage an Open Championship. From what I understand the "lack of links qualities" at Kingsbarns (as well as it's proximity to TOC) have kept it from hosting an Open, and I couldn't imagine them selecting a golf course with those kinds of grasses in the fairways.
Ran, given the ryegrass, would you still wish the Open was staged here? I know at the end of the profile you said you hope they put more fescue in to get F&F, but with their current grass blend, there's not a single Open course (let alone Muirfield) I would swap out an Open for.
On another note, given what I've heard about the construction (including the massive mound built to block Michael Forbes home from the golf course) minimalism is not a word I would use to describe the design process. That doesn't take away from the final product, but using the word minimalism in that profile (even though it's use does not implicitly reference Trump International) seems about as offensive as Pebble Beach using the words, "Golf Links" at the end of its name.
Getting people outside also builds up their appreciation of the environment. Be it visiting a magical golf course or a national park, people return home freshly reminded of nature’s glories and the importance of preserving it. Over the past two decades, a minimalist golf architecture movement has enabled the construction of golf courses in dunes with only nominal environmental impact.
For me, this is one of golf's most enduring qualities and a huge reason I got into minimalism. Environmental impact is going to play a huge role in the future of GCA and it's incredibly important that we both preserve it and take it into account as we proceed with the construction of golf courses. While your post mentions both the sprouting up of golf courses during the late 1800's and early 1900's in the area, they were blessed with a lack of knowledge as to the damage being done to the environment (I say blessed because low environmental standards and a lack of knowledge on the issue probably allowed many of today's great golf courses to be built).
Environmental groups often look at these sorts of things with a mindless thought as to the effects of golf courses on the environment, but it's because of projects like this one that environmentalists have the view of golf courses and golf architecture as an elitist, destructive process.
I will start by telling you a story about a golf course build in spectacular dunes on the wild Scottish coast. It was financed by a wealthy American and designed by a famous golf architect. The course is the only one in the UK to have been built wholly within a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and, working with Scottish Natural Heritage, the designers have created a remarkable course, built by hand which enhances the wildlife of the site. Over the 259 acres of the course, a mere 7 were disturbed during the construction. The owners are investing in a local hotel in the nearby town and have been welcomed by the local community. The course is the first 18 hole golf course in the UK to receive certification by GEO, the Golf Environment Organisation who described it as the “world’s most natural golf course” and an “exemplar of sustainable golf course management, going beyond what is required to produce an excellent links golfing experience.”
Welcome to Machrihanish Dunes in Kintyre.
The author then goes on to explain exactly why the Trump course has not followed this approach.
Machrihanish Dunes needs to be the example for which golf courses are built in the future. With this kind of approach, we may not be able to build golf courses of the highest quality, but we will no doubt create a better image for the game, and it will be easier to explain to environmental groups like the ones fighting Sharp Park (as referenced in the Profile) that golf courses can negate their impact and indeed be environmental stewards for the future. Trump International sadly added to the stereotype, and it's foolish to think that environmental groups will ever soften their view on golf courses and golf course architecture when golf courses are built in this manner.
It looks contrived, an Americanized version of a links. Disappointing.
Some spots look like true links holes that really excite me. Others look incredibly contrived and I echo your thoughts for those instances.
I admit to being a little biased toward the project because I have not been a huge fan of Mr. Trumps. The same goes for Mr. Hawtree after his work at TOC. However, as I see more and more courses around the US this summer I find I'm much more ready to criticize even my favorite architects and am starting to get a better eye for what I do and don't like and separate my preconceived notions of a golf course from the actual product itself.
End of rant.