Updated:
https://golfcourse.wiki/architectsAdded: Watson, Macan, P.M. Ross, Hackett, Pennik, and replaced Palmer with Seay
I could not find a birth year, or any biographical references for Rod Whitman. If anyone has a good reference for that, please send it my way so I can add him.
I want to address Tom's notes section by section because I take them extremely seriously, and they are a big part of the ultimate goal of the site:
If you wanted to tackle something REALLY useful, you could try to compile the research into which designers should get PRIMARY credit for each course. Many clubs have done this for their own course via club histories, and many more have been pored over on this site . . . but the information is very scattered and impossible to find when you want it.
I am trying to create a platform for informed people to share their knowledge with an open and unrestricted database. The goal is for courses/clubs, themselves, to be able to share this information in a centralized, navigable place. If you have an account, you can see the edit history, and you can be informed of any changes as they happen. This is something that is trivial for a club historian to do, but days, if not weeks of work for someone like me. The platform, ideally, can be structured such that the debate can be had by the users in the discussion sections.
I understand peoples hesitancy for participation, as I've lived through the repeated crowd-source to enshitification process that the internet promised and then squandered. The only two crowd-sourced websites that I see as having followed through with that promise are Wikipedia (not-for-profit model), and IMDB (for-profit model). The goal of this project, if it is successful, is to follow that pattern (maybe 501c3, maybe B Corp, etc.). I just wanted to build something good for golf. Unlike most golf sites that I see as mostly extractive (e.g. aggregators like Golf Now), or mostly marketing (various ranking sites). Finally, I want to make sure the data is available for the public clubs, especially less fancy clubs, to use at effectively no cost (especially the user-created printable yardage books). The reason why I started my blog was a way to demonstrate to people that I strongly care about golf culture in general, and I that have no intention of trying to capture the value that people who participate bring to the database. I hope people see that signaling as a sign their participation will be valued and not be squandered years down the road.
Listing a course under five or seven names may be accurate, but it is often misleading as well, and in the end, pretty unhelpful. For example if you were to look at a listing of courses by Tom Fazio and found his consulting work at Bel Air . . . yes, he did work there, but no, there is nothing of Tom Fazio's work in the course as it exists today.
Likewise, who built / shaped what can be very misleading, especially when presented by someone who shaped a handful of tees at course x and make it sound like they were the main guy. I am not sure all of that really belongs on an architecture database . . . especially not if it isn't confirmed by the club or by the designer(s). Where it certainly DOES belong is in the club's own histories, but most of them are very poor in that capacity, because they are written by people who don't understand the process.
Yes, I fully agree. I have tried to make significant strides on improving this. I have created categories: 'primary architect', 'redesign', 'restoration', 'renovation', 'expansion', 'modernization', 'modification', 'hole changes', 'green work', 'bunker work', 'small changes', 'past work'. This qualifiers now show up on the list of courses that an architect has worked on. I could easily expand this list as well. There is also a discussion page, where conflicting views can be discussed so that people don't just go back and forth deleting each other's entries. It's a work in process.
The reason why the current listing are vague is that, I was generously gifted a very large database that someone had collected over the years, and there was no distinctions given. Whenever I add course summaries, I try to look into the course history and update the lists to best fit the work that was done, but I am not capable of doing that for thousands of courses, but it's a simple three-click process to make changes, and I'm
incredibly appreciative when people do. So
thank you, as I know some people here have done exactly that.
Your most important goal should be not to add to the bad information.
Eventually, I want to have a required citation process similar to Wikipedia. That seems prohibitively egregious right now considering I'm the one doing the lion's share of updates. If the site grows to any notable size, it would be trivial to allow verified club or architectural firm accounts to review any changes made before those changes go live. There is dichotomy in users for websites of this type: contributors and consumers. You can watch the enshitification process work as sites stop catering to contributors, and start catering to consumers. Right now, I can't cater to people consuming content because the site is currently being built, so there's going to be incomplete and incorrect information. As I care about the long term goodness of the site, even if someone offered to invest to hire people to do that for me, I'd turn them down. The only way to prevent the process that has ruined most networks is to bootstrap, slowly and on a shoe string budget, and have a revenue model that isn't based on interaction and eyeballs.
I'm fully aware that it may not work, and that I'm just pushing a rock up a hill over and over for no reason, but I think it's worth trying. The site is open to anyone who wants to help, but my target consumer is jr golfers who want to do research on a course they won't be able to do a practice round at before a tournament, and small clubs that can't afford the thousands of dollars that firms like golf genius charge just to calculate who won a net medal play event (a simple math problem!), but also the architecture nerds who like to explore this stuff. The nerds and courses/clubs, however are also the target contributors. Right now, the best thing the site can for architecture nerds, is show a map the courses that a specific designer has worked on, so you can see if there are any in your area, which is especially helpful when you find something unexpectedly close (like how close Aetna Springs is to the Bay Area).