However I have both feet in Architecture and Golf Course Architecture as an occupation which many of you don’t so I can see from both angles from experience.
And yet, it's ONE perspective. Yours. It's not necessarily shared with a majority, or even a decent number of others.
Architecture has used computers to further advance more different designs which are now possible.
I don't think you really know how you want "computers" to be used in golf course architecture. I have a friend who is an architect (of buildings). Of course they use computers, but most of it is to do some of the calculations (for strengths of materials, loads and balancing, etc.) or to simply speed up the drawing or measuring (widths, heights, etc.).
We don't really need to know how thick of a beam we need to support a penthouse pool when we're building a golf course.
Edit: I see Ben may also be a (building) architect, not a golf course architect. Yeah, the two fields use computers VERY differently. You're not 3D printing a golf course any time soon, particularly on a smaller budget. Ben, your thoughts aren't halfway toward fleshed out, and it's increasingly obvious that you posted prematurely (at best).
I know some of you has raised about CAD use and Lido – to me that is a reproduction of a CBM course not an entirely new course
It's never been claimed by Tom or others to be a "new course."
The reality is most of us work on far less detailed and tighter areas plus a smaller budget and use golf course contractor rather than a specialist shaper which Tom is lucky to have in his arsenal.
So you're… jealous? Some of it reads that way.
Several clients do not want large rolling shaped greens they would prefer simpler and more subtle greens which can be faster and more playable to putt on which is the anthesis to a Doak, Hanse and C+C greens.
You can have rolling greens at higher speeds on larger greens — you just don't put the pins on the slopes, but in the bowls, at the tops… or in all of the other places where there aren't the larger slopes.
We are in a period of climate change and innovative sustainable approaches are needed which golf course architects are using that more of as a priority when they design future courses
Please provide examples of recent Doak courses which are not "sustainable."
plus using technology to make it more cost efficient overall
Rarely does "using technology" result in lower costs, and I don't think many recent Doak courses are not using the latest advances in the daily upkeep and maintenance practices. Do you feel otherwise? Is Sedge Valley not using the latest knowledge and technology in maintenance?
For example Ireland I have not played Carne, Ballybunion, Lahinch and Royal Portrush they are higher up the list than St Patrick's for me. Also if you go to areas like East Lothian how many GCAers would play Gullane, Muirfield, North Berwick ahead of the Renaissance.
I mean, who wouldn't? But that's a pretty shoddy comparison.
plus I dont see them as innovative like some of you do.
I don't think you've defined "innovative" in this context.
Have you tried to explore using computers yourself rather than rely on Brian Zager?
"using computers" to do what, exactly, Ben?
I probably have a lot more experience of using computers than you have and have better understanding of its potential even in future having researched it - not sure if you know Rhino and Grasshopper or even CATIA for example? having used/seen/heard it in used in areas other than Golf Course Architecture.
One of my degrees is in computer science. I've written software professionally, and still sell and maintain commercial software. I'm as computer knowledgeable as almost anyone else here, and I can say that "using computers" doesn't necessarily mean that something is better, or more "innovative," or more cost effective.
My sorry but I do think ripping off other holes using lidar technology to use it/create elsewhere is not innovative in my view - could that be a potential copyright issue or plagiarising something that has already been done of using exact or similar shaping elsewhere? plus take the credit for it .
Where have anyone "taken the credit for it"? C'mon man.It's an approach helped by technology NOT an innovative design idea that's the difference for me. It just sounds to me that it could be a case of like running out of ideas and using other designs.
It demonstrates that he's "used technology" more than you seem to want to credit him with having done.
If you look at the past timelines the styles have changed in shorter time
Have they? In fewer than 25 years?Things like Trackman and Top Tracer will then become more affordable.
What does this have to do with golf course architecture or "using technology" in building golf courses?
That's the danger the virtual world will become more and more innovative producing unusual golf courses than physical golf courses could possibly do. The next generation of golfers are kids mostly brought up on computer games rather than golf. The numbers could dwindle as the real golfers generation fades away.
Ben, bluntly, you're all over the place. And seemingly, blaming Doak for designing golf courses in the real world, and not "innovating" by operating in a way that you can only do in the "no real rules" virtual world. If you want your fill of that, can I interest you in some of the ridiculous TGL holes that we've seen? Do you like the "Temple" hole? How about the "Hatchet" hole, with virtual housing on the side?
I question why people think the recent reversible courses are innovative?
Because though there are examples dating back, even the Old Course doesn't play as a reversible routing very often (nor do some of the grass lines really work for it anymore), and the Loop is one of the only modern reversible courses. Have you done a reversible course, while tossing your "you're not innovative!" bombs out there? What have your innovations been, Ben?The more you write, Ben, the more it's clear you don't know what you're trying to say, and the more jealous you sound. Tom isn't "innovative" but you haven't really defined the ways in which he could or should be. You don't actually KNOW the extent to which he's used "computers," and when you do (like at the Lido), you mistakenly slag him for "taking credit" when he's done no such thing.