Olympic Lake and Mid Ocean come to mind as courses where the cross slope means you aim at the high end of the fairway.
Not mentioned so far are flatter fairways, with small areas of cross or wobbled slopes you need to avoid. Doak did this well with at (I think, from memory) no. 6 at Stone Eagle. Dog leg right, trap right, wide fw, but the right third of it will carry you into the sand. Classic collection bunker.
Many architects have thought in terms of "grinding out" one level area in a fw as the prime target, and letting the rest have more roll and thus a more difficult lie. S
ome holes have the entire fw warped.
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Tripp Davis did this here in DFW. Maybe he was going for a particular shot challenge of wedge off a sloped lie, which he achieved.
Also always liked the hole at Pasatiempo where and old ditch seemed to be smoothed a bit, but left as fairway, angling across to left.
There are others, I am sure. That kind of design has fallen out of favor in modern times. I always blamed that in large part on JN, and other pros, who seemed to think of the aerial game and targets where the ball would stop, rarely considering run out.