It seems like one of the keys to designing/building an excellent and well thought of modern golf course is in the visuals the designer gives to the golfer. The golf has to work too, and the greatest modern architects walk a great balance between good golf and a beautiful setting.
I’ve had a few folks out to tour Wolf Point and one comment I’ve heard, including a somewhat harsh criticism from an architect whose work I have great respect for, is you can’t see enough of what lies ahead of you. The bunkering is good, but it should be more visible, that green complex is excellent, but from this edge over here, you play peek a boo through a tree branch …etc…
Now, we knew it when we built the course, but we also knew our client was going to play the course almost every day, and we didn’t want him to get bored right off the bat. So we tried to leave a little suspense, you can see part of the bunker, but unsure how large the gathering area really is, you can see the entire flag on the par threes, but the surfaces blend into the background and hide some serious contour…(one player was highly critical of this feature).
Why don’t we hide some of the golf course a little more? Why not add a little more suspense, uncertainty, doubt, to our designs. Is it really so bad to get a little nervous when your ball runs out of sight over a hill (hidden water I’m not a fan of) and possible into a trouble spot? Seems like our greatest modern architects are very good at building beautiful golf courses that play well but I’d like to see some of that beauty become a little harder to find. And that doesn't mean its all about blind shots, but more about the need to prop everything up so it can be easily viewed.
In nature, I don’t think its all out there in your face. Sometimes you need to look harder, peel away a few layers, sometimes the path is not laid out right before you. Everyone is always asking what’s next, if its always going to be back to the future, let’s go a little farther back.