Turboe,
I'm quite familiar with Boulder Creek having walked the property several times during construction (with developer Joe Salemi) and now played it a couple times.
My feelings are mixed. Part of me has a great deal of admiration for Joe for taking on his dream of building a very good, relatively affordable public course ($50 ish). The story of Boulder Creek is very interesting; no lawyers, no environmental consultants, no construction company and no architect. In fact, he really only hired about two people with experience in the golf industry. This includes the Super who had experience a few Nicklaus courses and a relatively junior shaper who worked for one of the big construction firms.
Part of this was Joe's burning desire to do it on his own. But, also he just didn't see paying the likes of a Fazio or Nicklaus a million dollars to create relatively affordable golf.
Now the course itself. The property is very good with lots of elevation changes. If you go, don't be deceived by first impressions. The layout makes Boulder Creek look more like a driving range than a golf course when you first arrive. But, then a long par five (almost 600 yards) takes you into the heart of the property and provides a sense of isolation (no homes or real estate development to spoil things).
As for the holes themselves, there are several I like including #2, #3, #8, #11 and the very challenging #13.
The downside to Boulder Creek is what Tom Doak calls "details". The bunker work, for instance, just isn't very appealing and there is just too much evidence of "shaping 101" rather than the real classy stuff our favorite architecture teams might have produced.
Number 17 is a downhill par 3 playing 140-175 yards to an island green than sums up what you will find at Boulder Creek. It appears most people love it, but I think it is one of the most unappealing holes I've ever seen mostly due to the poor quality of the bunker work.
One other point to note. Boulder Creek is a very difficult course to walk. Apparently somewhere between 95% and 99% of the people playing the course take a cart. I've played it both ways and can see why so few people walk. That's points off in my book.
At the end of the day, I wish Joe Salemi had hired a professional architect. It's a good site that might have produced something far better, but so far as I can tell the "masses" seem to love the place.