Adrian:
Urbina is the one who thinks Old Macdonald is the best thing since sliced bread ... of course, he is more invested in it, because he has never been to Cape Kidnappers or Barnbougle. I can just sit back and laugh that if people think Old Macdonald is better than those, we must have done pretty well.
Bill M:
I would never compare the 13th at Old Macdonald to the 17th at National, which sits on maybe the prettiest site for any golf hole anywhere. We looked closely at the 16th hole at Lundin Links (the original Leven hole) and tried to do something in that vein. Our hole is like that one, where there is a hill (natural) at the front left of the green, and the entire green cascades away from front left to back right, so if you're not going to drive the green you'd generally rather be out to the right with your tee shot. There is nothing imposing to carry from the tee, but there are bunkers to avoid.
The holes where we moved significant amounts of earth are #3 and #7 (to soften the big dune features which are the backbone of the hole), #6 fairway (which was too flat), #15 fairway (which was too undulating!), #16 (to create the Alps ridge) and #17 (to create the short-cut fairway which was very low ground). Those are the holes on the perimeter of the site -- on the holes in the middle, we barely did anything besides bunkers and greens. It sounds like a lot, but I would guess it was on the order of 150,000 to 200,000 cubic yards all together. Mr. Urbina may correct me, but we are both guessing because we were just renting the equipment on time and materials, and nobody was counting the earthmoving quantities.