Ryan F.
I feel essentially the same as Kelly in his position re: defense of my work as well and other architects for that matter, but here is a little story I'll share.
My 2nd course was built on old fallow farm land that contained small and large patches of wetlands ranging from .3 acres to 17 acres in size and other interesting, but segregated vegetative habitats. The land area was relatively tight, only 167 acres so there was a significant challenge to route the course, however, I felt that with a smart approach and other consultants to assist, I could 'fit' the course in and also greatly improve the flora and fauna habitats within the site and at the same time, provide better continuity and significantly less habitat segregation from adjacent sites surrounding the course. BTW, this did not cost appreciably more $ to the owner, just a willingness on my part to manage it and to find like thinking consultants to 'see' the goal.
During construction, great care was taken preserve the small treed pockets and to save topsoil from key areas that bordered the wetlands (after evaluation and analysis, it was determined that these soils had almost the same hydric and plant supporting qualities that the wetlands did). My grading and drainage plans protected (naturally) the existing wetlands and created an additional 2.4 acres of wetlands and out of play grass areas. I also created ponds, I needed soil for construction, but I placed the ponds within the design to help integrate all the habitats and then graded them such that I created fringe wetland borders (litoral zones) around the ponds, knowing these would soon turn into great habitat for ducks, frogs and all that good stuff.
The additional wetland creation was easy since it bordered existing wetlands and worked well into the design. Respreading the saved topsoil worked perfectly and when hydrologically connected to the existing wetlands, the new wetlands took off imediately. More importantly, however, the new wetlands and grass areas allowed me to CONNECT the pre-existing segregated vegetative corridors, thus improving the habitat integrity internal to the site and allowing wildlife to move through the course with protection. You can check with any Fish and Wildlife agent and they will tell you that segregated habitat is poor for maintaining wildlife within an area and for sustaining long-term environmental bio-diversity.
I did give up options for a better routing, but the owner was financially committed to the site and the course was going to be built, it was a matter of doing it or doing it better with the right approach.