The features of this hole are massive and the elevation changes are dramatic. The picture doesn't come close to doing it justice.
It's a severe drop from the tee down to the fairway, with the green very well elevated. The green is in a V shape, but only the back 1/3 is really usable, or no more than the back half at most. The two wings slope steeply down and, interestingly, are kept mowed at green height almost all the way down to the ends. No ball will stop on them and, based on my few rounds there, any ball that rolled down was lost in the junk. The collection area was not enough to save them. In fact, as mentioned previously, any ball left above the hole was at a great risk of rolling all the way down no matter how carefully putted.
It was, without a doubt, the most controversial hole among the non-GCA interested members of my group. They all uniformly thought the green was unfair. The margin for error is non-existent, so I understand their concerns. It's a hole (specifically, a green site) unlike any other I've ever seen and I tried to convince them that the uniqueness alone should get it a pass from them, but no such luck.
As far as the center bunker, it's more of a volcano than a pimple. It's big and it's raised up quite high. Again, the picture really doesn't describe the dramatic slopes at play on that green.