Cabell,
Maybe we will have to agree to disagree, and believe me, I'm not trying to oversell the fourth hole, but there are some things wrong with your assertions.
The hole I inherited there was nothing like the original Flynn hole. Most specifically, the green I started with was over 8,200 square feet and was vastly oversized in the previous renovation because the club insisted on making the hole play 200+ yards. Flynns original green for that hole was more along the lines of 5,000 square feet. I "restored" the green size to his original strategy, about 5,500 square feet.
The creek that used to cut in front of 3 green (filled in buy the club, a mistake in my opinion, but thats a later discussion) also cut in fron of number 4 tees and meandered down the left, so it existed. Buy "restoring" the influence of the creek, I believe we are justified in having it pour into (not uphill? as you state) the pond.
The pond is only 20,000 square feet, less than half an acre, and six times smaller than you state. It was necessary to filter runoff from the golf course to the original creek and was incorporated as a matter of permitting, not strictly aesthetics.
One last point. A great hole is a great hole, no matter where it sits. Incorporating a great hole in the River Course where the opportunity presents itself is my job.
I had opportunity to "restore" one of Flyns smaller green complexes (over the monster that was there which really did not fit), I had and opportunity to work with state and federal agencies with a water quality improvement (pond and recycling water), I had an opportunity to create something "different" (which is what the client wanted), and I had an opportunity to add a quality hole (a great hole according to you and others) to a golf course which, in my opinion needed improvement as the par threes at the River have evolved to much sameness from in-house changes by amateurs over the years.
Maybe we should get together one day and I'll show you the picture from which we derived our strategy, one the club had never seen before last year.
Regards,
Lester