ONE MORE TIME...this isn't about reno/resto for me other than fake resumes....my gripe is the guy who a board or a client thinks had designed say 50 courses when he might have one or two or none but he list reno/resto where some could have been one or two bunkers...same goes for looking at young guys who apply to ASGCA and list 5 courses they worked on under their ASGCA principal...names no where on the scorecard/they didn't have to sell the project or make the payroll but it will be listed as their design...huge difference...
First, not sure how you morph this into an anti ASGCA rant, but then again, it is you.....
First of all, the requirement has been down to 3 projects for a few years.
Second, if we held the requirement to those who sell projects (and who is to say an associate hasn't sold for his boss?) we wouldn't have qualified architects like Marzolf, Lipe, etc. We have considered that idea on several occasions and found it wanting for a few reasons.
As to credit, I don't think ASGCA has much to sort out. Any design credit for membership is just intended to make sure different applicants from the same big firm are claiming the same projects. They shouldn't, and of course, whether public, private or "for ASGCA membership" the rule has always been that the principal of the firm gets to choose.
Forrest and I were discussing this as a side issue this morning by phone. In the day and age when you can search the internet and find out most of a gca's life story and work history, does any board really get bamboozled by some associate falsely claiming credit for his former bosses' work? Yes, a few do and have, but its not prevalent, no more so than, say, voter fraud in the Georgia election......
(hey, if you mention ASGCA to ring my bell, turnabout is fair play)
Have a nice holiday!
BTW, as to the central question, maybe Kalen has it right. While it really isn't important enough to enough people, I suppose there could be some sort of rating system or maybe we just encourage the four or five golf journalists who cover such things to at least come up with a loose label system, i.e., renovation, restorvation, loose restoration, sympathetic restoration, true restoration, etc. I agree many courses have been called a "restoration" that really have the new architects stamp on them more than the "can't tell they were there" stamp.