I don't know whether others would agree with me but there is a course in Pittsboro, NC called Chapel Ridge that claims to be a Fred Couples design but I haven't been able to determine who did the actual design and I really like it. It has a great variety of holes with risk/reward par 5s, 2 drivable par 4s for the longer hitters, and a really good group of 4 par 3s. The course is on some very hilly property and makes the most of it yet it seems to fit very well within the land. Unfortunately it was built just as the economy was crashing so it has always beens operated on a shoestring as it was supposed to be part of a housing development which never really took off. If they had a decent maintenance budget and converted the bent grass greens over to Bermuda, it would be really good. Everyone I have taken there was really impressed with the course and the great variety of holes.
Jerry,
Chapel Ridge is one of my favorite layouts in the Triangle, and it hasn't always been in bad condition. (I think you meant that they should convert to bermuda; they still have bent grass greens.) The course gets plenty of play, or at least it used to; lots of people used to come from Raleigh and Greensboro to play, and the housing development is actually pretty big.
The real problem at Chapel Ridge, along with The Preserve and Falls Village in Durham, was the company out of Virginia that had the courses for several years. There were all sorts of issues among the partners, and money that was supposed to be going into maintenance went elsewhere, likely into someone's pocket. That company is out of the picture now, and Chapel Ridge is gradually getting back to at least decent condition. A year ago, the greens at Chapel Ridge were as much crabgrass as bent grass; that problem has been reversed. It is still VERY rough around the edges, and the bunkers are sort of a disaster, but at least it is back to being playable. Arnold Palmer Golf Management is currently running the courses, fwiw.
It is a Couples "signature" course, but Bob Moore was the GCA who did the work, btw.