Mike,
You’re always banging that drum and whilst I think you are correct, you also seem too black and white to me:
- Like with all design, the front-end conceptual part of the process is where you need a certain skill. In most design, this is for the people who earn the big bucks. In GCA, routing is the most important part of early design.
- But by saying what you do, you are belittling everything that comes after. The skill in the strategy, the detail and the feel of the course.... Last week, I was looking back at those old Sand Valley, Poland threads where Lassi Tilander had done a routing and Tony Ristola did everything after. Tony and others clearly felt that Tilander deserved NO credit.
- Just because someone doesn’t have a bunch of new 18 hole courses to their name (I guess only a handful of rising architects in the last 10 years do) doesn’t mean that they aren’t the equal or better at routings than many more well known names. I’ve routed a large number of courses. Most of them have been theoretical on real project sites. Other architects and students also routed those sites. I know what they provided and I know what I did. I’ve seen what is built. I know routing is one of my strengths. I’ve never had a full 18 holes completed in the ground.
- I know very well respected architects (with many courses to their names) who knock routings out quickly and don’t consider it the most important part of the process. I disagree with them. Some of their routings are very good. Some are very poor.
- Likewise I know architects who would get slated on this forum who are excellent at routing but their detail design is uninspired and doesn’t meet the aesthetics that this group like. Their routing skills could be better than anyone’s for all I know
- In fact, that last point is important. After site and soil, detail is the differentiator to many an eye. They can’t tell a good routing from a nearly good one. At least they can’t quantify it although it holds the course back from what it could have been.
- My point: Just because someone has been lucky enough to practice in the 90’s and has 20 new courses to his name does not make him a master router. Just because someone has been unlucky enough to practice in the 2010’s with no new courses to his name does not make him less of a GCA.
- Of Course, if you are purely talking about “restoration”, maybe your point holds more water, maybe not. I wouldn’t know. But what restoration architect hasn’t done a bunch of renovation / redesign / original design work as well?
- Anyway, I agree that routing is the beating heart of every course. But can you tell me, who are the best routers in the business from the last 60 years? I honestly wouldn’t know. I can tell you that TD and Bill Coore and Gil Hanse are magnificent at the detail and the build. I can tell you that they find great natural golf holes. But I couldn’t tell you if they are better at routing than others (disclaimer: if I had seen more of their courses, maybe I could).