Tony
It is true, there is a whole worldwide industry of art and architecture restoration who nit pick over the smallest detail. But they approach their individual art form with some intelligence. They understand the differences between painting restoration, garden restoration, architectural restoration, etc. They understand these disciplines are guided by different goals and criteria, criteria which take into account the unique challenges each has. No reasonable person would try to compare the restoration of the Mona Lisa to the restoration of the Roman garden to Fishbourne. It is equally ridiculous to compare restoring the Mona Lisa to the NGLA, a golf course that has been in continual use for over ninety years.
The NGLA is a serious artifact. The reasons you would want preserve, protect and restore it are numerous. First of all it is great golf course today: enjoyable, beautiful and challenging for the great majority of golfers...and the restoration enhanced all the above. It is also one of the most significant designs in the history of golf architecture. In addition it has been very well preserved over the years. Its restoration was relatively simple, involving removing trees, expanding fairways and recapturing lost green surfaces.
The way I see it you have a couple of choices with courses like NGLA, Pine Valley, Cypress Point, Swinley Forest, Dornoch and Morfonatine. You could redesign these golf courses in order to challenge the very best golfers once a year or once every couple years or once every decade, and in the process lose some portion of the historic work. Or you can accept that they can no longer host a professional event and preserve & protect these wonderful golf courses. In other words keep these flawed (if you consider not being able to challenge today’s hyper-equipped pros a flaw) but otherwise spectacular designs for the majority of golfers of today to enjoy, and preserve these great works for future generations to enjoy, study and learn from.
I go for the latter, hosting professionals one weekend a year is not big loss IMO. There also appears to be some movement on the equipment front, so it would be even more foolish to something drastic today. Architecture and most other design disciplines learned a long time ago the importance of preserving & protecting their very best designs…its about time golf architecture follow suit.
The next person who says they know what any dead golf architect would have done if he were alive today (to rationalize or promote a redesign) should be given forty lashes with a wet noodle. The NGLA has a Biarritz?
I’m not sure where you have been, but courses like Myopia Hunt, NGLA, and Eastward Ho! (and the list is growing) haven’t been able to challenge the pros for a long time. That is why there is growing pressure on the rules bodies to do something. Those who love great architecture realize what the consequences have been and will continue be: unfortunate redesigns like Riviera, ANGC, and Inverness. Your possible solution of ripping up these significant designs in order to challenge the pros is a bad one.
As far as restoration is considered, I personally think it should be limited to very special designs. There are a relatively few number of courses that should be candidates for restoration IMO. There are a far too many redesigns today that present themselves as restorations. I personally don’t have problem debating the meaning of the terms, IMO it is important that golf architecture have a precise definition for preservation, restoration, historic reconstruction and redesign.