The complaint on here is that owners won't let architects build 100, 300 or 500 approximate yard holes from the back tees. Nobody is suggesting 18 of them for a course is a good idea.
My question is, why can't an architect make the case to their client that a 300 yard hole is extremely valuable and 2 or 3 of that 'in-between' type in the course of a round will add tremendous interest?
Jim:
I am not sure that it is the always the client objecting to us building holes of those lengths, although Mike Keiser [who can do no wrong
] was hesitant about the 6th hole at Pacific Dunes until I pushed a tee back to 316 yards instead of 288.
Likewise, I've had a lot of clients who wanted me to "just build more tee space [further back]" on my shortest par-3 holes, basically any that were under 150 yards. And dealing with the PGA Tour, they just don't want to have half-par holes that could result in back-ups on the tee, when they are trying to cram through a full field of players who are slower than molasses.
But I do think you're partly right, that after a few such conversations, most architects just avoid the uncomfortable conversation by conforming to the norm and avoiding certain lengths.
Some of it just comes down to numbers, too. Between Barnbougle, St. Andrews Beach, Tara Iti, and The National (Gunnamatta), I have built a total of seven par-4's that are under 300 yards, and every one of them is a great hole. But down there they measure in meters, not yards, so whether it's over 300 or under doesn't even come up. [They also don't give a crap about whether a course is over 6400 m, the metric equivalent of 7000 yards.]
But, back home in the USA, I have not yet once built a par-4 hole that's under 300 yards from the back tees!