Michael,
You're last paragraph is nothing more than a hyperbolic leap from what you quoted. Do you think in RTJ's time there wasn't members who had to approved planned work, and that there wasn't input from the USGA? You think he just came in and said hire me and I'm doing what I want how I want and with as much of your $$$ as I need? I promise you he had to get sign off by the club and the USGA if the work was about prepping for a US Open. That is my opinion, if you know better, please set me straight. He and the club thought at the time that they were improving the golf course.
Regarding modern day "restorations". If I want to restore a 100 year old golf course, the first thing I have to decide is what will I restore. As Sven notes, the club and GH probably had some decisions to make. Then they had to decide exactly what to restore from that period, and where to add "new" design. Please set me straight again but I think the club has visions of hosting major tournaments. Do you think the 1929 version could hold up to the modern equipment if it was actually "restored"? You think the greens from 1929 would perform with US Open speeds? I honestly don't know the difference between what was there in '29 to what is there now, but I'm guessing the '29 greens were not "restored". If they weren't, someone had to design new surfaces.
I believe the work GH performed and much of what we call "restoration" would be better termed, "influenced by". I believe the reason you hire GH is because you know important design decisions will need to be made every day.
If I'm restoring a classic car like a 1929 Rolls-Royce Phantom, I don't need a designer, I need a craftsman. If I'm restoring a famous old house or building, I might need an architect because the systems will be modernized, but I will upgrade systems while trying to maintain the look. If I'm restoring I'm not making the rooms bigger or raising the roof 10 feet. But If I'm restoring a 100-yr-old classic golf course AND I want it capable of hosting a major championship in an era where the average drive is well over 100 years longer than the period I'm using as a template, then I'm not restoring, I'm doing work that is influenced by an architect's work from 95 years ago. I don't have green scans from 1929 and I can't pull up LIADR. And no matter how talented anyone is in creating renderings or any other digital medium, it's all educated guesses made by talented professionals, but it is their interpretation. The REASON I hire GH or any other highly qualified architect is because there will be design decisions made every day. If he can educate members' about the architect, great. If he teaches them about their own history, great. But somebody has to make the design decisions, and it ain't Donald Ross. My issue is with the "restoration" marketing. It is not with the work. There is a difference, and there are many, many levels of these so called restorations. And I don't get why we don't just call it what it is. Architects have design options and they pick what they think is the best one. That's design, their design. I call it revisionist history because for some reason we in the industry feel like we have to hide that and claim we are restoring something when what we are doing is taking design work from 100 years ago and using it as an influence as we modernize golf courses. [/size][/font]