dream course if I would choose the site:
Although I've never been there, a place like Sunningdale or Swinley Forest would be what I consider an ideal site. Don't get me wrong, I love links golf and would love to get a shot at designing on a site like Cruden Bay...
but I love places like Royal Lytham & Garden City and I feel Sunningdale and Swinley are close to that but with more contours on the property. I like the fact that the course are an internal landscape on which the game is played. To me, great views are impressing at first but I love courses where the quality of the course is about the game, not the scenery. The course would be smart, efficient, not necessarily photogenic (no postcard golf) but a blast to play, day in day out.
If I have a blank canvas.
Well, I'll put mounds everywhere, on each side of the fairways, built 5 ponds and big cookie cutter bunkers and my last three holes would play around a lake. That's what I would do. (I'll end my sarcasm here before it gets dirty)
No seriously from a blank canvas here are the key for success in my mind:
1) the tie-in with the surronding landscape. the course has to look good from the outside in as well as from the inside out. A flat piece of land cannot turn bumpy in a instant while crossing a property line. That's what looks wrong to me from the Castle Course. Basically your contours has to return into flat on your property
2) I'll create two or three majors contours: granted that you need to dig an irrigation pond, the dirt coming out of it would generate a some major contours similar to what you can see in the surrounding landscape, whether it's a steep 3 meters high ridge or some 5 or 6 meters high mounds. The hole would use those contour has much as possible. from one big mound, you can have a tee from one hole, a green from antoher and a fairway sliding around the mound. (a 5 meter hing mound might stretch over 70 meters horizontally)
3) I'd have a soliid landscaping concept and investment. you don't want to end up with rows of trees on each side of the fairways, you want to create some ambiance with your tree / bushes planting.
4) I'd organise the contract so it's a 10 year job for the architect. You have to create a landscape, not implant a course into one. You need to be able to anticipate and participate to the evolution of the course.
I know the Blainvillier, played both courses. I'm not very fond of the style (too moundsy for a flattish setting) of the course when it came out. The course has evolved a bit and is getting better.
What I like of the Royal as a concept course, 6500 par 72 but there no bailouts around the greens, it's water or sand.
One thing ,if you want to play well there, aim for the 150 marker on every hole. It's a safer spot of the tee and if you are good with your 8 or 9 iron that day, you can play well.
Heritage is Ok, but I'd rather go to Hillsdale 15 minutes away