The previous two posts, along with others, suggest most(if not ALL) architects purposefully regurgitate previous design ideas that they have built or studied. I disagree, and haven’t experienced many requests to impart an old idea in the field with the guys I’ve worked with.
Reason No. 1- When architects do a routing, it revolves around siting the greens on topography the makes a putting green possible. In other words, the green is always going to be on land the can produce pinnable grades.
Reason No. 2- Golf courses have a fairly traditional range of yardages for the holes implemented. Those yardages make sense. Too short of a hole may not create the challenge expected, and too long of a hole will lose the golfers attention. So, all well respected golf holes fall into the range of approximately 90 yards out to 600 yards, with rare exception based on elements or elevation/ terrain.
Reason No.3- Most architects allow the shapers they work with some freedom in the process. Every shaper, whether intentionally or not, imposes a bit of their personality and creativity into the course.
Reason No. 4- Most architects want to be as original as possible.
So while I agree that there are times that old, tried-and-true hole concepts are implemented, it isn’t the only way holes get built....not by a long shot. The bottom line is that there isn’t many times that re-inventing the wheel is a good idea, but there is still plenty of room within the process to produce great, original ideas that are dictated by the land rather than a memory.