I can't speak for anyone else on your list, but yes, sure I would want to design a TPC course in the right circumstances. I spent a lot of time with Pete Dye at the first two TPC events at Sawgrass, learning what he was thinking there, as well as a bit of time with Deane Beman who was the other originator of the concept (and also another of the people who wrote a recommendation for me to get that overseas scholarship). And then I worked on the planning for the Stadium course at PGA West, so I have a pretty good idea about the gallery-flow ideas that went on top of the playing characteristics the Tour wanted.
I know some architects have felt their hands were tied on what they could or couldn't do in designing a TPC course -- Tom Weiskopf felt that way, but his feud with the Tour brass preceded all that. Right now I can't think of what they wouldn't let me do, but the Tour would be a "corporate" client, which means that sometimes you're being told something and there's no one to argue with about it; we would always prefer to have an individual as a client.
The one criterion I would have for taking on a job like that is that the project weren't too constrained by development requirements ... Scottsdale and Sawgrass are golf courses first, but many of the others sacrifice more to the surrounding housing developments than they do to being a TPC. I'm not saying we wouldn't do a course with development -- we're working on two right now -- but both of them have creative land plans so the golf isn't dominated by the houses.
I would love to take a shot at designing something which made the Tour pros work ... it would make me think out of the box for a change. And I think it could be done, although I think it would have to look radically different than most of what's being built today.