Maybe there are shades of this at Augusta's 6th? It was allegedly designed as a redan green, but has that pinnable shelf back right. But there's no slope in the middle of the green to kick a ball back there that I've ever noticed. It's more like a shot hit to the middle will feed left, while the back right shelf is maybe best accessed by bounding one in off the kickslope right of the green. So... more of a double redan than a redan/nader.
It's interesting to think about a green with two "wings" on either side of a central ridge that could feed balls in either direction. There's a green similar to this on my home course. Putting or pitching across the ridge is a real challenge when you get a ball on the wrong side. An imprecise shot that hits the wrong side of the central ridge on such a hole could be a really awful miss.
And this topic gets me thinking - if we had gotten more time with Strantz, would he have eventually built one of his par 3s with tees at so many angles that you could approach a green from the far left to create a reverse-redan, from the far right to create a redan, and from the middle to create something more like an Eden?