Maybe Ran can tell us.
Where's the fun in that?
I'll throw out Bill Coore's first design, Rockport Country Club. Getting back to Wethered & Simpson's definition, and sounding like Smyers, there are a lot of places on that course where you're dead but don't realize it yet.
Coore defended par from the green mainly through big rolls that served to section the greens; the angle of these rolls relative to your position on approach serve to make your shot easier or harder.
For example, on the par 5 fifth, if you take the tiger line and succeed off the tee, you will be faced with a long forced carry to a green where the rolls run roughly parallel to your angle. So they offer no distance-control assistance and in fact punish mishits of the longitudinal variety (common error for long irons and woods). This being a strategic design, if you miss anywhere but really short, your "penalty" is exacted via a difficult next shot or putt: you've got to putt (or chip) over a roll (or two).
The (dim) view from just right of the middle tees: the safe route is left; for the tiger route you must challenge the bunker and trees in the middle and cut off as much as you're comfortable. (Sorry for poor-quality pics!)The hole has a double fairway, one for the safe route, one for the tiger route. In contrast to their position viz the tiger route, the rolls lie perpendicular to the safe route.
That means if taking the safe route you must lay up on your second shot to a distance you are comfortable with. Mess up "latitudinally" (i.e., distance, a common error with wedges) and you're out of position, thanks to the rolls.
The green; point of view is safe routeJames, you can add Rockport to the list of flat courses, although Coore, like Peter Thomson, did run the bulldozer over the property and create washboards, humps, hollows, mounds, and slight elevation changes.
They both had the benefit of wind on their respective properties, though. Turns out, Rockport is one of the windier places in the U.S.
Mark