Finally, some of you guys are touching at what I'm getting at...
M. Dugger says:
"Making money is rarely the same thing as building a golf course for all the "right" reasons. Or building the "natural" course.
Like with a lot of things in life, the pursuit of wealth can spoil golf."
Then Jeff B. follows up with:
"I find myself wondering, how many courses prior to about 1990 were designed with no thought to commerical success? Or, at least breaking even?
Other than a few GA archies - namely CBM and Thomas, what architects weren't also under pressure to deliver what the owners wanted to collect their fee and get recommendations for others?"
That is the line of thinking I was using when I started this thread. And like I mentioned previously, my original question, "Has commerical interest and mass appeal stunted the growth of quality golf course architecture?", has been answered in spades. In fact, hardly anyone has really talked about quality golf course architecture. Rather they talked about business.
Jeff, "how many courses prior to 1990 were designed with no thought of commerical success?" I don't know the answer, but Fred Jones' The Golf Club is one of them. This guy was on a mission to build his golfing oasis and he did it...no matter what. I think Pine Valley and The National Golf Links of America were founded under similar circumstances. There is a great quote on one of those, I think it is Pine Valley, where the owner asked for money but made it clear that no financial return was expected. (Does someone remember it?).
That is what I'm getting at. And, like I mentioned, financial interests seem to have almost totally destroyed the "ideal golf course" line of thinking and almost totally killed revolutionary thinking in golf course design. Give us par 72, 4 par 3's and 4 par 5's, 7,000+ yards, multiple sets of tee boxes (championship, ladies, members, etc), raked bunkers, greens stimped over 10.
I also sense a frustration/anger from the architects on this thread. Like I mentioned earlier, I get where you are coming from. You are building/running a business. You have to please your clients. You do good work with the parameters you have to work within. But that is not what I'm getting at.
And this is why I brought up the amateur architects building their own courses and Fred Jones style owners. More of this, and less business schemes with golf as a piece of the ploy could take the art of golf course architecture to the next level.
Perhaps it will never happen...money and business is too powerful a motivator and the people with the financial werewithal (did I spell that right) to do something like this, have no interest in it. And/or they are afraid they'll be ridiculed for being such a dreamer.
That is my idea/point.