The reason this topic intrigued me so much is that both Stone Harbor and Running Deer were so "over the top" for most players but were intriguing and fun to play for me personally. But I'm more of a masochist when it comes to golf and not always concerned with my score. But even for me a steady diet of pain isn't much fun!
I think back to when we bought Greate Bay in 1998 and it was pretty obvious some of the reworking by various architects wasn't as good as the Willie Park Jr original design. However, our bottom line wasn't going to go up dramatically by bringing back the past. Just not our target market. It would respond to better pace of play and aesthetics so the work we did there right away addressed some flaws in the new design. I found it easier to use the old pictures of the Park routing and holes when doing this so we got some extra bang for the buck by using this as a guide. For me, one of the signs of an excellent renovation is that no one can figure out the new holes from originals!
I had seen what Seaview did on the Pines course in adding a range and a housing element and it was just awful so was careful not to build something that didn't fit.
"Clashing Rocks" was the inspiration for the 7th hole at Stone Harbor. Being a huge fan of Greek, Roman and Norse Mythology it still would not impact my thoughts when building a golf hole yet the original redo clearly showed this was what Desmond was thinking. Many a good round was killed there as the only guaranteed play was to rifle one over the green, take a drop make four and move on!
Of course Phineus wasn't there to whisper this to the player like he was for Jason and the Argonauts. Don't get me wrong there is some real genius in the design but it was a raspy cacophony of too much.
Eddie Carmen was a really cool guy. The word "cool" and the 60's vernacular fits him. He was a purist and an iconoclast at the same time. Think one of a kind and he comes to mind immediately. Golf pro, inventor, storyteller, Renaissance man , they all fit him. In many ways he was a modern day Crump and when my friend Jimmy Smith told me I had to see what Ed was building ,that it was the best golf course he had ever seen it wasn't 24 hours later that I found myself walking around the place with him. It was obvious that he was pouring his heart and soul into Running Deer and a few of the holes are incredibly beautiful. In another setting and with a bigger maintenance budget I truly believe what he was trying to accomplice would shine thru.
Which brings me to my experiences at Twisted Dune and this particular query about architects. Sean asked if anyone shaped first and designed later. We kind of employed that process as our goal was to sell as much dirt as humanly possible to the AC tunnel project and the golf course was a by product of the dirt moving activities. But I digress. When we were building the greens which usually came before the fairways Kevin, our most talented shaper kept pushing me to make them more severe or even "crazy". He had done a lot of work at he aforementioned Running Deer for Eddie. Kept telling him that as envisioned it would be ok!
In looking back I'm guilty of not pushing enough, not being bold enough in spots. However in defense of what we built I envisioned the maintenance meld (for you TEP) to be unlike any in our area. Given that we weren't anticipating much play and the golf course was theorized as ultra private and a sister to Greate Bay I really was ready to take a chance and let it be harder and faster than anything anyone had ever seen in this area. Truthfully my concerns were that the greens and the surrounds would be perfect and the rest of the place short, neat and really fast. So, without warp speed playing conditions made by the maintenance meld a lot of the angles and issues don't come into play for the expert. Moreover lots of us don't get the run envisioned to fit with some of the distances of the holes.
So, to answer my own question. Yes, something held me back and it wasn't the budget or constraints by site conditions. I will you that I had a blast building it and would love to try and do better!