Agreed that you "can" build interesting an in fact amazing greens if you know what you are doing with just about any construction method.
My point of view is that the modular systems (USGA, California et al..) are more difficult to move about, change, tie-in and work with over time without damaging the integrity of the way that the system needs to perform, in particular uniform sand depth which is absolute key.
More times than not, I'm finding problems or saving problems from happening because once everyone sees that something needs to be adjusted or moved about a bit it can't be done or shouldn't be done on top. In other words you can't change the top without changing the bottom. It's modular and it isn't always good for design. I keep saying that the most interesting greens I have ever seen (The Old Course) aren't Modular and are part of the landform. Since I'm a Turf and Soil guy and not a design guy, my job is to help the design guys get to where they want to go and still be able to grow grass.
At Pacific Dunes, Tom Doak and Jim Urbina tasked me to determine if we needed to seek certain sands to build with which were on site (as they did when building Bandon Dunes) or if we could shape in the sands in situ. We created a few rules and regs as far as how material would be handled and what we would do if we found material changing too much and played very careful with materials during construction. I'm happy with the result.
At Texas Tech, we don't have the liberty of any kind of good materials on site and so, we found a material that works for building greens with no gravel blanket (sorry Jim Moore, but the local sands are worse USGA sands than they are Cal Spec sands) and then worked out a way to sand cap the entire green surrounds so that Team Doak could work their magic and so that we wouldn't have firm dry and fast on sand greens and then two steps off subject the ball to the whims of the native clay soil. I'm happy with the plan and it has taken a bunch of work on our part to educate everyone as to why we are doing what we are doing.
At Rustic Canyon, upon first inspection we had a bunch of really nice material which seemed sandy enough to buld with. But careful testing and modeling and some good old digging yeilded the info that we had nice material but not nice enough to hang my hat on for building greens with. We ended up building a Cal Spec system there and it allowed Gil and Company to do what they wanted to do. I certainly would have liked to do more of the Pacifc Dunes sort of thing there, but the individual situation wouldn't allow it.
Jeff Brauer...with all due respect...we are having trouble out there with people thinking that California Spec greens are simply USGA greens without any organic matter in the sand. And from my perspective we can't build a true cal spec green with USGA sand or vice versa. Of course you know that the Cal Spec green has no gravel blanket (at least I think you do
) but many many many very "smart" people out there don't seem to understand that the entire physical system is entirely different, not just the sand spec itself. Bottom line, we have to have air, water and light to grow grass. Getting it wrong with either system pretty much takes away the Air.
Bad thing.
And I don't care what you spec or think up, if you aren't there doing the due diligence and the quality control and managing the details of the way greens are built...any situation will go out of control and give potential terminal problems. That's why I LOVE being in the field!!!