With so few golf architects doing new course work, almost every practicing golf architect is now focused on renovations. How can they not be if generating revenue is required? How many new golf courses will be built in the next five years vs how many renovations will be done? The ratio has to be somewhere in the range of 250 to 1, maybe 500 to 1 in favor of renovation work.
Did any architect grow up dreaming about "fixing up" an existing course? I don't think so.
How will that change the profession? One way I think it has already changed is the focus with modern architects seems to be all about what is flawed on existing courses and how they can be fixed, often more from a technical point of view vs from an artistic POV.
I know there will be some renovations where a new course is built on the old's footprint, but it seems the vast majority of work is about making courses function better. As if the focus is more on improving conditions. That may be overstated a bit, but there is no doubt in my mind that in most cases the modern architect is a renovation man and any new work is probably treated like a once in a lifetime opportunity.
Do you agree? How will it change the profession?