Anthony....I have built many bunkers in the style shown, but I usually incorporate a vertical earth face that allows for the water to drop through the sand to the sloping floor of the bunker without blending with the soil.
This is not a new method by any means.
I also like to be able to vary the grass face and cut lines through out the bunker as a whole....let it evolve over time ....and I feel the bunker liner hinders my freedom to do this.
Sometimes I find a natural blending of the soil/sand surface more pleasing and natural [think Cuscowilla], than the starkness presented by the splashed saucers [think ANGC] found on many courses.
I wonder if Augusta, or Merion, Oakmont, or Cypress use liners?
I wonder if Doak Or C&C have used liners on any of their notable creations?
Actually think I know that answer.
When I worked as head of Special Projects at Pebble Beach some time past [before the advent of liners], one of my main jobs was to rebuild and repair the many high splashed bunker faces that after time would collapse and fail.
I was very good at my job....and learned first hand that greens, bunkers and golf courses are bio dynamic, growing and constantly evolving organisms....and attempts to not recognize this were usually costly and time consuming in the long run.
Which is the main reason I try not to fix anything in time....whether it be maintenance practices or golf design details in general.