I think the greens surrounds are one of the two or three most important parts of the design.
A simple green can be made interesting by a surrounds of anything from dramatic to subtle contouring, and varied maintenance meld. I know of a course where the owner and archie got into a disagreement with the notion that "some" of the surrounds should be cut to fringe height where the contours lead to interesting surrounds chipping collection areas (ala Rossonian philosophies). The archie in that case was all about an even and consistant fringe of one pass and rough collar, unvaried. The owner wanted to fringe mow in some areas of interesting contour leading to creation of the collection hollows, etc. I think the owner demonstrated more sense than the archie in that case, and he did so with great results and higher golf interest, IMO.
I have always said that personally, I like Wild Horse even more than Sand Hills on that point, specifically because the surrounds are wider and more interesting, with more room for options and integral surrounds contouring tied into green contours. (now that I haven't been to SHGC in about 4 or 5 years, maybe my memory is fading, or they have widened the mowing surrounds there, but my impression remains such).
One thinks about Rustic Canyon 12 and its surrounds as how integral apparent subtle surrounds effect green play.
It all depends on the art of the shaping of these surrounds and greens. Dramatic can be good or devolve into containment or "Reeses Pieces"
Subtle can be designed to play dramatic. It all depends on design, turf species, and maintenance meld philosophy.