MikeC:
I've often said on here (sometimes facetiously) that I can't play a course and analyze its architecture at the same time very well! (Not unless I happen to be with people like Dave Miller and Ed Baker at Charles River simply because playing that course with them is an on-going educational experience in architecture because they can point so many things out!). Apparently that's true to some degree of me though! Maybe it also means I can't chewing gum and walk at the same time! All I can say is, be that as it may!
To really take in architecture I have to walk the golf course just with the architecture in mind!
I've been to Fieldstone about four times--twice to interview the club for GAP membership, once to play the course and once to officiate the Patterson Cup! I guess I just had other things on my mind and to answer your questions properly I probably need to walk the course again just to look at the architecture!
Things like the bunker grassing lines and such I just can't recall very well. I do know though that H&f are what I would call "large scale" architects in most everything they do architecturally!
Generally, I feel Hurzdan and Fry are very consistent architects and very comprehensive architects. Their courses are very identifiable to me too. They're very accomplished earth-movers and tend to create golf courses that might be what I would call "microcosm" courses. In other words, their courses tend to be somewhat of a large scale experience in visuals, somewhat at odds with the overall sites in which their courses are in, in my opinion!
They seem to do their own kind of "lines" on their courses despite where the site is! Maybe they feel their "lines" meld well with the overall specific sites but I'm not sure I do.
They're a team that has done a few things that are quite revolutionary in architecture, I'm sure. They may be the best out there in creating overall architectural "lines" that use shadow and light in interesting and dramatic ways! To see a H&F golf course like Fieldstone in the early morning or late afternoon is quite a visual impact!
And I also think that H&F are very good at creating strategy albeit in somewhat of a modern architectural way! I think their courses are both fun and interesting to play and certainly can be demanding. They sort of touch all bases in an architectural sense. Quite a lot of tee shot strategy, second shot same, some interesting greens in both a playable and visual way! They also do some things I really like such as the 11th and 12th and 14th hole at Fieldstone (big melded fairway between #12 & #14 with an old ruin in the middle)! #11 is just a very interesting and multi-optional short par 4! #15, 16 and 17 are quite interesting too!
But many of the entire landforms of other holes are sort of "shelved" into the landscape if you know what I mean! And I find that to be a bit of a company trait!
As for Philly Cricket's Militia Hill course it's somewhat the same idea! Strategic (and certainly plenty of bunkering that makes it so), large scale, some very interesting holes for a variety of reasons (#2, #3, #4, #6, #7, #11, #12 etc) with a standard tough elevated #18 green somewhat reminiscent in difficutly of Rees's Lookaway #18!
I think Hurzdan & Fry have their own unique niche in architecture right now! They do things that are, again, very identifiable, much good and some not, in my opinion.
They are also extremely comprehensive in their product, I'm told. Mike Hurzdan, apparently has a real interest in the history of architecture, has studied it, collected it and written about it!
I've also been told that both of them are very good people, hard working, great guys, great to work with and their clients seem to be very happy with what they do for them.
By the way, I believe the instructions for the Militia Hill course was NOT to do something in the character and style of Tillinghast or the Wissahickon course! But to do something different.
Many people think that Tillinghast designed 36 holes at Philly C.C. (which he did) and that the Wissahickon course is just one of the two courses of the 36 hole design. That's not true! When they told Tillinghast not to build 36 holes he designed the Wissachickon course entirely different from either of his 36 hole courses!
That's the primary reason why Hurzdan and Fry never could have used Tillinghast's plan for the second course!
I also heard that H&F may have just specifically hired a really good bunker man, so who knows what might be about to come from them!