Tillinghast had strong views about this subject. In the main he prefered that the site for the clubhouse be agreed upon first so that it would more properly define how the course could/should be laid out. He also believed that the site for the clubhouse would be best chosen by himself because the golf course was more important than the clubhouse and should be on the best land for it. Note the following:
"In nine instances out of ten the committee already has a preconceived idea of the proper building site, and in as many cases that site is on a little hilltop at the very greatest elevation on the tract. It is not the intent to question the wisdom of this choice except as it relates to the golf course itself. When club houses are built on unusual elevations it makes it difficult to construct true holes to and from them. Either there is a tendency to get away with a hole, which rather suggests driving off the roof, or the last hole presents blindness; and only too frequently there is also involved that great abomination--an arduous trudge uphill, which brings the players home blowing like porpoises in a state of exhaustion. Personally, I incline to sites at lower levels. I recall discussing the point with two of the leading landscape architects in America--A.D. Taylor of Cleveland and Charles W. Leavitt of New York, who both agreed with me. Mr. Leavitt was developing a tract of some 400 acres for the Philadelphia Cricket Club. It was my work to plan 36 holes there, but before any plans could be attempted it was vital that the club house site be fixed. The committee strongly considered a hilltop, but Mr. Leavitt urged a much lower level. It was his idea to build the entrance roads along the higher levels, so that really the first view of the club house might be had by looking down into a small, sheltered valley, very much after the old English manner. He finally demonstrated that there was more breeze down there than on the hilltop. To be sure, the scenic beauty of any site must be considered to some extent, but golf values are of even greater importance. "