If you are building Pacific Dunes as a walking-only course, why have five green-to-tee walks in excess of 150 yards?
(When lower 9th green is used).
Garland:
Pacific Dunes has been open for 14 years, and in that time I've hardly had anyone complain to me about the walk. The "excessive" walks you mention are as follows:
#3 to #4 - Finding the natural site of #3 green meant a big walk back to #4 tee. It's the most beautiful walk on the golf course, right along the cliff tops when you get to the ocean for the first time; one of the competitors at the Women's Four-Ball said she cried when she saw it the first time. I don't think she meant she cried because the walk was too long. [P.S. Just guessing, but I think that first walk at Chambers Bay from #3 to #4 has a more negative impact on people's perceptions than it should because it is NOT a pretty walk ... you can't see where you're going and it takes a long time to get there, so it sets the tone the wrong way. The walk at Pacific Dunes does not.]
#9 lower green to #10 lower tee - Using the lower green as an alternate meant you'd have to walk up over the hill to get to the 10th tee. I just liked the lower green site that much to say ok.
#11 to #12 - This is the only one we really didn't like. Originally we intended the back of #5 tee to be used for #12 tee, but we decided we just couldn't trust players not to short-cut down #4 fairway. It's a less than ideal transition.
#13 to #14 - The location of #13 green was landlocked by the cliff and the huge sand dune. Walking backward off the green is a compromise, but again, we're doing it at the most dramatic point on the golf course. Nobody ever minds.
#17 to #18 - Early in the routing process there were two holes after #17, and the walk wasn't going to be as long; but by the time we sorted out that #18 should be a par five, everyone was pretty fond of #17 as it was, so we didn't change #17 to tighten up the walk. My apologies!
Sorry you don't like the course. Luckily for me, most people do, so the green-to-tee walks have never been a sore subject.