TEPaul,
It would depend upon the personal relationship I had with the owner/developer.
In other circumstances, it would depend upon the demand for my services, the owner's circumstances or the membership's circumstances.
Had C&C offered that deal to Roger Hansen, I think he would have taken it.
Lowell Schulman and Rees might have done the same.
I think it's a course/owner/architect specific type of issue.
The "hands off" clause doesn't preclude fine tuning or revisions, it just precludes spontaneous, member driven changes or knee jerk reactions.
It gives the golf course time to "settle in".
Joe Hancock,
That's why so many disfigurations have taken place over the years.
Here's the question I have for that element of the membership, new to the golf club, that wants to make changes.
You liked the golf course just the way it was when you joined.
In fact, that's one of, if not THE reason you joined.
So, why do you want to change the golf course after you've been a member for a year or two ?
Typically, everyone wants the golf course to play to their strong suit, to their game, and when you let the members loose, each one vying for their particular preferences, you have chaos that usually ends up disfiguring the golf course.
Having a "hands off" clause would go a long way to thwart that.
In the OLDE days, patriarchs or oligarchies created golf clubs and NOONE dared challenge them, let alone suggest changes to the golf course. But today, with democracy in full swing at most clubs, everyone feels entitled to exercise their "rights" and those rights extend to reconfiguring the golf course to their whims.
If one views the issue from a historical perspective and asks, have most clubs improved their golf course with alterations, or have most clubs damaged their golf course with alterations, I'd lean toward the damaged side, and as such, I'm wary of change.
A "hands off" clause diminishes the chance that a fad will be thrust onto the golf course, a fad with a limited or permanent shelf life, a fad that will breed more fads, and more alterations, until the golf course doesn't resemble its original design.