This is the opening hole on a well regarded modern course. The course is a high end public course that attracts a lot of corporate tournament play. The hole is a par 5 ranging from 500 to 550 yards (or 420 from the forward tees). The course is a faux-links style with 20 foot high "dunes" bordering the fairways.
The tee shot presents an interesting dilema (especially for the opening shot of the day) - do you lay up to the centre line bunkers or try to carry them and have a go at the green in two? From the back tees the layup is about 220 yards while the carry is around 260 yards. The fairway appears to ramp subtly up from tee to bunker. In reality it's a rise of 30 feet - enough to impact carry distances.
If you lay up then the second pair of bunkers are not really in play for the second shot - a reasonable carry of 170 yards will easily carry them, although the shot is uphill and blind. The bombers who can carry the first pair of bunkers can't reach the second pair since they are 330 yards out. Are the second pair of bunkers redundant?
From past the first set of bunkers to the green is a further rise of 15 feet, so even the bombers are faced with an uphill 250 yard shot to a green that's angled and protected by yet another pair of bunkers, short left and a pair of pots built into the face of the push up green. The surrounds of the green are closely mown, so getting on and holding the green from anywhere is an adventure. There are however lots of recovery options around the green.
My issue with the design - on first seeing them, the first pair of bunkers entice you to try to carry them (assuming you're playing the right tees) yet for most golfers the carry is not possible given the elevation rise and being the first stroke of the day. After one or two plays, the only sane approach is to lay up off the tee and play it as a three shotter. For the bombers, who are loose on the first tee, the carry is well within reach. They have a carry that's not really risky for them and they get a disproportionate gain compared to more average length hitters.
Why not put the bunkers another 20 yards further out to present more risk to the bombers. Or, provide a slightly wider "Hogan's Alley" to the left of the bunkers to provide another option to the medium length hitters.