Mark,
Nowhere did I say that an architect, or this course in particular was meant to look as though it was not "maintained" for 100's of years. As others have mentioned, sleepers were used to shore up bunkers edges which would require MAINTENANCE.
But these sleepers have been installed in a way to suggest that they have worn and not been maintained. New courses (even in the early 1900s) with sleepers had them more neatly and evenly arranged. As those courses wore, the bunkers were maintained to maintain that neatness. That's why the sleepers look like they have not been maintained.
Which begs the question, why would you want someone to think your golf course was just built yesterday?
Because it was? Why the need to pretend it is older than it is? I can't think of any other construction or manufactured product (apart from "distressed" furniture) where that is done.
I understand your analysis, and I think you are correct. And that "fake" that you talk about is borderline genius. I can't re-call this ever being done, and being done so well.
I don't think it has been done before, which is why we are discussing it here. Your genius is my artistic dishonesty. That's fine, we are allowed to disagree without being called stupid.
I just don't understand how you think this is wrong?
I don't like it because, to me, there's a pretence and a dishonesty about it which detracts from the actual quality of the course. If it's a great, new course, why try to hide the fact? If Trump and Fazio had been the first to do this in their development north of Aberdeen, I can't help wondering if the reception would have been so warm.., to me (and this is a matter of personal taste) this faux antiquity is something I would more have expected from Trump than Parsinnen, there's an artificiality to it that I simply don't like. That's a matter of personal taste and a valid one. You don't agree (or understand). That's fine, it doesn't make either of us wrong, let alone stupid or foolish. I suspect, to be honest, that a lot of this comes from our respective backgrounds.
I do wonder, without any disrepect to anyone, whether this sort of artificial age might not be more acceptable in a country where it is unusual for things to look 100+ years old as there isn't much of anything (in terms of buildings, for instance) that are that old than in a country where it is common to live in a building that is 100 years old and where we walk past buildings older than that everyday. I don't know, I'm just thinking aloud.