Some of these features look as if nature has had more of her way with them than the architect did.
I think the architect would be pleased to hear this, given that he long tried to make the hazards look as natural as possible.
A lot of instability in the shifting sands and wind in these environments, that the grass hasn't gotten under control here.
These photos strike me as being representative of efforts that were made prior to upgrades in the sciences of grass and irrigation. Is that why I am seeing more variation here than I associate with this architect? Did his features become more stylistic after those sciences developed?
More stylistic? As I said above, he wanted them to look natural, and like the ones on the real links courses, so I find these photos to be quite "stylistic." But definitely that style changed over the years, although I am not sure it was CBM who was solely responsible for changing it.
When were the upgrades in grass and irrigation to which you refer? Surely before 1926, almost two decades after they began building the course? Can you tell which two photos are from 1926? Can you tell which photos depict the oldest features?
But even still, there is every kind of bunker here, and with as much variation in the bones of these features as one may find with any architect since.
I agree and would add that it is pretty incredible that many try to pigeonhole CBM as one who only built industrial, unnatural, and simple geometric features.
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I've added numbers to the photographs.
Does anyone care to try and date them from oldest to newest? Some are pretty easy, but there are a few tricky ones.