I know it's a parsing of terms, but can anyone build convincing consensus on what the Mackenzie, or Ross or Tillinghast, or Raynor, or Thomas or Crump, or Wilson or Maxwell or RTJ "concept" is? TD alludes to this problem in one of his earlier posts.
Consider TOC, St. Andrews, the most unattributed, organic "design" we recognize...what IS the concept(s) there? Diagonals? Don't Miss Right? Avoid Extreme Hazards? Stay in Front/Don't Go Long? Accuracy is Better than Distance? Blind shots and camouflage provoke judgment? Or eradicate it? Fortune Matters More than Skill? You Can Talk to a Slice But a Hook Won't Listen? Wind is Necessary for Exhilarating, Repeatable Golf? Oddities, named bunkers, monuments, roads, bridges make the player charmed? Hole names lend emotional gravitas or amusement to a game? Easily walkable? There are dozens more; additional "premises" by which a hole, a course, presents itself to the player - which you or I could outline and would be true.
Inventory your own favorite course(s) whether familiar through repeated play, notorious study or both. What do they have? What tests, challenges, and delights do they offer and how often do they combine and/or repeat them?
When I do that, I find that:
a. there are rational premises that (merely in my opinion) are actual preferable and can be agreed upon that never get old, irrelevant, but are so venerable they are invisible now as a concept: "walkable" is one, "penalty sours, reward sweetens" is another "the worst thing about Golf is looking for golf balls" is another one.
b. the greatest variety of premises (concepts) that can be integrated into and/or among the constituent holes in any one course or body of work among an architects courses will keep that architect relevant. Once in a blue moon, an architect actually comes up with a radical new concept, shot requirement or visual...but if that becomes his style (the radical - think Desmond Muirhead) then it no longer becomes relevant...it's all radicalness. Having a handball wall 15 yards behind a green might keep an architect relevant in the moment, but not if he has one at every third course he designs.
c. The Template holes are, again imo, a nice demonstration of this idea and in all their iterations, produce conceptual relevance. Not because "Oh here's the tiresome Redan and yet another Biarritz or Cape..." its because what's in that Template name is just a title page for a whole bunch of those other premises..."diagonals, miss in front, use contour, avoid right, fortune is as important as skill" are built into that iteration. the beauty is that the Template Hole can't be replicated...no Eden can be perfectly duplicated, but the concepts it embodies can...and are.
So my final Jeopardy answer is that a designer maintains conceptual relevance by deploying a variety of established older concepts (premises) in each property he is commissioned to work. He can't locate them all at every property, just like St Andrews can't establish the concept of "water carries" in its "design" The isolation, the finding and the conglomeration of these concepts in a course is what makes that course relevant. The client dictates whether or not the architect has the lattitude to do that independently or is that freedom sanctioned by purpose...a championship, sales of memberships or homes.
cheers
vk