Sean - I have modified this 'links' title to better define what my intent of the subject post is all about...which is trying to determine the location and play characteristics of courses that are built on warmer sandy links environments that out of necessity use warm season grasses as a play surface...and I could care less about marketing, or muscle, or trying to take away anything from the original links courses of Northern Europe.
As you probably are aware, I have been involved in the design of a golf course (Diamante Dunes) that is located in the tropics on the Pacific Ocean. The course is in a strong dune system (50+ meters high) that was deposited by the ocean and is divided by an arroyo (intermittent river) that provides for an additional sand supply. This area is sparsely vegetated being the southern extent of the Sonoran Desert.
The topography of the dunes system is every bit as strong as Ballybunion (Tom D could probably concur), and given adequate rainfall and a more temperate latitude they would be very similar.
To build the course we added water to make up for the lack of rainfall and added a warm season grass that was able to handle the high temperatures of the region...while designing and shaping the the course to to reflect the high winds and sandy conditions that exist there.
I think we did OK given the fact that I had few similar golf course precedents to refer to (Forrest Richardson could also concur)...as links style courses in a desert terrain are a modern occurrence, primarily because of new water sources and the ability to irrigate.
All this being said, I would like to get back to the original intent of this thread...which was to try to identify similar courses, and their conditions and play characteristics.
Chow