Tom MacWood,
You keep forgetting a critical issue that I've reminded you of time and time again, "The Will of the Membership"
Over time, Hollywood, without the aid of an architect removed bunker after bunker, and, when they decided to do some work on their golf course, they didn't want to restore it to the aerial photo that hangs in the locker room.
I would have attempted to restore it to that photo as much as possible, bearing in mind that the average age at the time of the project was about 70 and that more women now play the golf course than they did 50-70 years ago.
Hollywood was a championship golf course, under the radar, but, probably the equal of the championship courses throughout the U.S.
If Tommy Naccarato could post the old aerial, or if someone could retrieve it from the archives, it would help.
Quite simply, the course was too difficult for "today's" membership.
And as such, it wasn't going to be restored.
As to Bethpage Black, management didn't want a restoration as they prepared the golf course to host a U.S. Open, however, many on this site, intimately familiar with BPB, who have played it 100 times or more prior to the work Rees did, who have played it subsequent to Rees's work, have praised the work and efforts to be faithful to AWT's original design.
Your issue seems to be a marginal one at BPB.
If I recall correctly, you didn't like the perimeters of the bunkers and the work done on # 18.
I would have prefered it had they left the rear greenside bunker on # 18, but, I believe that's where they wanted to place grandstands for the tournament.
One look at the 18th green at this year's British Open tells you how that goes.
Having said all this, I think having someone champion pure restorations provides a very valuable point of view.
It also helps mute or make people think twice about radical changes to their golf courses. It diverts and stifles efforts to change original designs in favor of "modernization"
In general, I happen to agree with Tom MacWood about pure restorations and not altering golf courses.
Some of my beliefs are based upon the results of clubs allegedly "improving" their golf course over the last 60 years.
One of the reasons restoration is becoming popular is because clubs altered and ruined so many holes over the past 60 years or so, and, many of them did the work on their own.
When one looks at the disfigurations that occured at Oak Hill, Yale, Garden City, Inverness and others, one can make a strong argument for "pure" restoration, and more importantly, for not touching your golf course in the first place.
So, in a general sense, I'm with Tom MacWood on this issue.
History has proven him right in a great number of cases.
Unfortunately, memberships don't think like GCA.com and don't share the values and the appreciation for wonderful designs by famous and obscure architects alike.
All too often, green chairman, green commitees, presidents and boards alter the golf course to suit their particular or perceived needs. Evidence of those disfigurations is legion, and unfortunately, continues today.
Another component assisting in the disfiguration of golf courses is TV and the PGA Tours.
For whatever reason, memberships with average handicaps of 15 to 22 want their course to be like those hosting golfers with handicaps that average + 4 to +8.
Surely, that's the begining of the formula for disfiguration.