Let’s hear some of your favorite exceptions Jeff! I think it’s your 9th at the Quarry is totally blind from the right side of the fairway? Maybe some other exceptions to the “rules”?
Charlie,
Yes, and I hear about it, LOL. A few years back we did a master plan there and one of the projects was to remove the trees on the right, but mostly because the valley fw and green were too shaded. But then, people started walking down the formerly treed slope and it was so steep too many fell on their kiesters. I haven't seen it but I think the next project is to grade the slope back, and possibly turf it so it is easier to walk.
I have never minded the concept of not being able to hit the green with a straight shot from every inch of the fw, especially when a straight shot allows you a clear line, but most golfers don't like it. It's just one of those things, as TD notes, that eventually get drilled into you that you should have a shot at the green from the fw, which eventually alters the original design. I guess the majority rules in some of these situations.
For that matter, I have built a few blind holes, especially tee shots. When I need to do that, I like to be extra attentive to finding some way to mark the line, like aiming at a house or water tower, etc. in the background, cutting a slight valley in the ridge to indicate the centerline of the fw. Also, while I think the world has too many "bunker left, bunker right" greens, if I have an uphill shot situation, it would be the one place where I placed matching "bunker left, bunker right" to mark the line. I also tended to just make the green round, with no tucked pins, and if I could get a punch bowl effect, so much the better, and that was typically not hard to do on an uphill hole. If not, then I made sure the green surrounds, other than the wing bunkers, were fairly simple, often fw height, just to help golfers find their ball that they could follow from the fw.
I have also designed alternate routes where one is blind and the other allows you to see your shot (typically on second shots on part 5s) I reason that if you can play where you can "stay within your headlights" then an optional blind shot is fine, a la the Alps hole at NGLA.
And, as Tom notes, the key to great architecture is to know when to break the rules and get away with it. Or as my mentor used to say, you should break the rules a few times for each design, but if you did it on every hole, you would just get goofy golf, not interest. In listening to golfers over the years, I came to the conclusion that a few quirky holes gave the course a sense of place (if nature driven) but only a few are "allowed" until the golfers start complaining.
TD,
I didn't say your drain basins didn't work at PD. I just said they never worked for me, at least long term. And my view was to not build something that would become a maintenance problem over time. I guess we each have our own version of balancing practicality and art, which as you say, could change from site to site. The number of times I got to work on a sandy site can be counted on the fingers from one hand, so that certainly influences my opinion.