Of course, I totally disagree with this point of view, and not just because I've built a few courses that I see no need to change anytime soon.
Of course, if in fifty years' time there are kids hitting 400-yard drives, someone else will see the need to change it, even if amateurs still hit it 220 and the course works fine for them. But are you really going to use THAT as proof that I "didn't get it right to start" ? By your silly idea of design intent, if the equipment and the golfers keep changing, then it's impossible for any design to stay "right" for very long.
As for Pinehurst, Donald Ross lived there and he liked to tinker with Pinehurst #2. By the same token, he didn't tinker much on Pinehurst #3, and it was just fine until the resort started taking ground away from it and squeezing 18 holes into the space of sixteen. Did the long-term success of the resort mean he got #3 wrong?
The courses you built were often on wonderful land and with people who knew and loved what they were doing. Not all owners are so fortunate.
Scores of courses, especially in Central Europe, built on good land fell far short of their potential.
Let's say the architects drew awesome plans; who was building these courses during the boom years, and even afterwards? How much oversight was provided?
All this reminds me of a quotes, and a poll on the same subject, the two 70-years apart. (paraphrasing) Tillinghast said half the builders had no idea and left it up to the architect. GC News did a poll in 1996 or 97 asking North American architects if they had qualified builders for their projects. About half didn't, mirroring what Tillinghast noted in the 20's. Where were the quality builders coming from in Continental Europe? There may have been a few for the mass of courses being produced. There was a dearth of knowledge, care, trying or love.
There was one architect in GC News who spoke about his recently renovated golf course needing one in the future!!! This after they spent seven figures. I'm certain the club president hoped none of his membership saw that.
These courses could use a long-term vision to upgrade their golfing experience. Would the club be wise to rehire the original architect? If they didn't see fit to protect the client the first time, as is the case most of the time, I don't think so.
As I like to say, and have written in a short book for investors... "You only have one chance to build to build an incredible, cost effective project."
Everything that follows (redesign, remodel, improvements) is part of the original cost, merely deferred.
I also agree with what Cleve Trimble wrote on the original Prairie Club website... "Great courses are a labor of love, and greatness is unlikely if the designer and owner only play the inaugural round together and never see one another again.