My current membership/home course is UNC Finley, a complete makeover in 1998 by Fazio of a 50's George Cobb design. I have a question that I know has been discussed before, but I can't find it.
There is currently a project in the design phase, with the Davis Love organization sort of driving the bus, that revolves around building a new team center and team practice area where the current 10th and 11th holes are, then building two new holes on the west side of Finley Golf Course Road (where holes 12-18 are currently), which would put 9 holes on either side of the road instead of current the 11/9 configuration. I don't like the project at all, though there is much to learn about it yet. I've asked to see the drawings, and got a firm "NO!" from the Associate AD in charge of the golf course.
Perhaps most significantly, the 9's would be flipped, with #1 being the current 12th hole, which is a par 3. It's worth noting for those of you familiar with the course, that the current 13th, a par 5, would become two holes (a four and a three). The current par 3 13th would go away, replaced by a short par 4, and a new par three would be built behind the current 15th green playing up to the lower part of the current 17th green, with the 17th green moving to the left as you face it from the 17th fairway. If you're keeping score at home, that's three par threes on that side, and it changes (if not screws up?) arguably the best hole on the golf course, the par 5 17th, which has a split fairway with two centerline bunkers, and a two-tier green with a three or four foot drop running from front to back on the very large green.
While I know that there are courses here and there with three par 3's on a side (the front side at Tobacco Road comes to mind, for one), the only prominent course I can think or find in a search is Royal Lytham and St. Anne's, and that's sort of a different category from this anyway. So my question is, are there other highly regarded courses that begin with a par 3?
No need to mention places that aren't prominent, and no need to tell me about the problems created for tee times and pacing by starting a course with a par 3. I'm just wondering if there even ARE any well-known, highly regarded courses that begin this way.