John McMillan,
You feel the 13th green looks "cool", and you'd love to play it a million times, but still you're questioning whether it "works in a golfing sense"?
Am I interpreting your comments correctly?
If so, for the sake of discussion, I'd like to know what you think doesn't work about the 13th green? Indeed, it's nothing like any other green I've ever seen. And it's by no means an easy green to approach and putt.
Having played it twice, I had a lot of fun with the 13th hole -- in large part because of the the green complex and the plethora of potential hole locations I imagined while trying to hit different tee shots based on those spots, as well as approaches and chips, pitchs and putts to those potential locations. (We were lucky to be the only group on the golf course one day I was there!)
Adventuresome golfers could spent an entire afternoon having fun with that 13th hole. Fun!
I think you could have easily taken any of the world's great courses on the day they opened and call a few features "questionable". All the great archtiects of the past took "chances" and didn't always build "safe" courses. And Mike took "chances" at Kingsley, sure, I'll buy that, particularly in light of the fact that Kingsley was his first 18-hole course from scratch. I too could point out a few things I think should be "softer" or slightly different. But still, I admire Mike for the "chances" he decided to take. All in all, I think Kingsley works quite well.
And, john_f, I agree with you about the 14th. All the preliminary talk I've heard about the course suggests it is under-rated -- a fantastic par 5 hole, for sure.