Do you think there is anything significant about your recently completed Lido project in terms of trends in golf course design? Or is it really just a one off replica project that while brilliantly executed doesn’t say anything about design, i.e., the minimalism vs maximalism perspective some people apparently have?
Just to be clear, I’m asking about the course as golfers will play it, not the technology that went into making the Lido re-creation so good?
Tim:
I've been asked this a lot lately, but usually in relation to the technology: will the tech we used to build Lido encourage other architects to be even more daring and build wilder stuff?
Lido was a flat site that was totally created wall to wall. Its origin doesn't really have anything to do with the technology; the whole design was done by C.B. Macdonald more than 100 years ago, and they used a physical, plasticine model to work out their ideas and create it, and they followed the model to the letter in building the golf course.
Likewise, I've heard that Steve Wynn insisted Tom Fazio build a detailed physical model of Shadow Creek before construction, so he could get a feel for it from a pinhole camera. [Computer graphics were a different animal in 1990 than they are today.]
There are always going to be golf courses built on sites that have little natural interest. There are a bunch of them being built right now in SE Florida [where I am tonight], virtually side by side. It's up to the designer whether to space the holes well apart and go back to flat, native vegetation between holes or to push the holes together and contour from wall to wall; the decision depends partly on each individual site. Our client here has very high goals, so we are taking the latter, more "maximalist" approach I guess.
It is entirely possible today to choose your 18 favorite holes [as long as they don't rely on an ocean or a huge slope or an 80-foot live oak], sort out how to cut and paste them all together, and re-create them on a flat site.
In a couple of weeks I'll go back to north Texas to work on our new project there, and that one is as minimalist as it gets, because there are green sites and good fairway contours out there already, created by Nature. Nature was not as kind to Florida!
Is one approach inherently better than the other? I think it depends on what you've got to work with, and what the mission is.