Back home and trying to post something interesting.....I guess we shall see.
I have always heard the old phrase that you remember something about every hole on a good course, that each hole has some unique "twist" or feature, and you strive for that as an architect.
Would it be interesting for us to take a look at our home or favorite (or favorite famous) courses on a hole by hole basis to see what makes each hole memorable to us?
It is said that golfers remember shots, and those designers trained as LA's recall features, and as I reviewed my current renovation (just wrapping up) at Superior National, it is features I recall (cue Joan Mitchell, I guess.....) but here goes, as only a starter example:
1- Green drops off on right side. Horseshoe grass bunker on left side
2- Roaring River in front of green
3- New Back Tee Across River, Crossing holes with 2 (always wanted to do that, River and route to other side actually allowed it)
4- Angled Carry FW bunkers, best on course IMHO
5- Up and Over FW (due to Don Herfort Routing, but quite nice) and Green Bunkering
6- With tree clearing, new elevated tee gives view of Lake Superior
7- Converted Par 5 to short 4, Driveable green, horseshoe green around pond, view of Lake Superior
8-Downhill par 3 (finishes conversion of old awkward par 5)
9- Deep valley fw (replaces old uphill blind tee shot) 4-5 foot deck in green
10-New wider fw, bunkering at green (nice hole, but probably best remembered by those who played the old hole, narrow and tough)
11-Angled carry bunkers on long approach shot
12- Cape Hole, water right
13- New green with "Pearl Necklace" bunkering on longer par 5, Single Tree in Fairways offers short cut "field goal" tee shot option (however, you still can't reach green.....)
14-Roaring River, driveable green, new tee complex, new green with narrow "catwalk" approach
15- Roaring River, skinny Augusta 12 like green
16-Clearing behind green allows another view of Lake Superior)
17 - Drop Shot Par 3, Wide Tee and Green, when tees are right, pin is left, vice versa.
18-Carry grass bunker, Redan Green.
Not sure those are enough to make each memorable, and of course, we were lucky in that the existing course had every hole with a view of the lake, the roaring Poplar Creek, or the mountains to sort of give each hole something to look at and experience.
Anyway, in design it is an interesting exercise I usually go through, in this case, brought on by shaping the last green (14 with the cat walk) and not wanting the last one we shape to be average, even with the roaring river right next to it.
And, on plane home, started doodling the green and hole designs for my next project with the same thought in mind. Admittedly, at this later (hopefully not the end!) stage of my career, a lot of it is applying sort of a "greatest hits" ideas to the land forms that fit the idea best, which may be a whole other discussion topic.....
Not sure this kind of thought will pass the "interesting" test, but thought I would throw this hat in the ring to see if anyone bites......