Guys, sorry for the late response, but I was at a funeral all day yesterday.
Let me start by stating that my previous posting in many ways did not come across as I intended, mostly because I was inaccurate in my writing (I am an engineer and English is not my first language
). Let me try to put things down more accurately:
1. I think Gil might be the best restoring architect on the planet, based on the many projects I have seen detailed pictures off and documents like the beautiful LACC one describing the before and afters. I said so much in a Christmas card I sent him last year, for what its worth. Given that I kind of dabble in the same area, I think that is a non trivial endorsement. Second any critique I might have of any of his work, would not be to further my own commercial ends, since I have none in the US.
2. I know south Florida is flat with a high water table. I live in Holland, which might be even flatter, with an even higher water table. I know what that means for building a golf course, having built 5 courses in the Netherlands. I also know that these circumstances make it very very difficult to produce a very good golf course, and probably impossible to make one that can compete with the best in the world. Unless you would blow up the site, like what happened at Streamsong, it is difficult to produce the undulations and landforms that make golf interesting, but blowing up a historic golf site like Doral obviously was not an option.
3. I know LACC and Doral occupy completely different landscapes. I had also seen pictures of both places before and after the renovations. What I wanted to say is that the before and after effect of the renovations were much positively obvious at LACC. Maybe that is because the original architecture that got restored at LACC was a few notches better and more interesting than at Doral, and therefore restoring it had more effect for me.
3. I am not familiar with Dick Wilsons work, like I am familiar with the US architects of the golden age. As such I cannot comment on if the restoration is sympathetic, but knowing Gil's competence I am sure it is well thought through.
4. Mark takes beautiful pictures, that show the golf course in a way that the golfer would experience when walking the course. I love his tours and frequently spend significant time going through them. My sincere thanks for all the time and effort he puts into it !! I run the site Golf Architecture PIctures.com, so I know how much time it takes to do these tours.
5. As an architect I have seen very many courses and their sites in person and on pictures. I know that pictures distort, and that they often do not show the real changes in altitude etc. I am therefore quite calibrated when I look at pictures to know what I can conclude from them and what not.
6. When I looked at the pictures, what I saw was a typical Florida golf course, with many elements I do not like in a golf course, namely lots and lots of water, symmetrical tree lined fairways, a large amount of very large bunkers etc. The one thing that caught my eye were the interesting undulations in the greens.
7. Even though this might be the only type of golf course that can be built ion such a flat and wet site, and the fact that Gil did a thoughtful and sympathetic restoration of the original Wilson course, in the end it still looks like a typical Florida course. If the begin ingredients are poor for golf, there is only so much even the best architect in the world can do. I judge a course by the end result, not by the many limiting boundary conditions that cause to be less than great.
7. What sparked my mail was reading Connors comment: "The pictures look great. From what it looks like the course looks even better ". Based on what I stated above I did not think that anybody on GCA would find the course looking "better than great". Obviously I was wrong, and have learned from that.
8. My worry is that GCA turns more and more in a "its all great" site. In the last few weeks alone I received several PM's from people stating their opinion on something I posted, explaining they could not put their (critical) opinions publicly on GCA. That way GCA becomes a PR site where all is well, all courses are "great", and as Max Behr already said in his well known 30's article nobody will learn anything anymore.
9. Maybe my main question would be one to Gil, namely why he was interested in a project like Doral. Given his skills there must be at least 50 classic courses in the US alone where the impact he could have had would have been much larger. Assuming he has more work than he can handle, why spend it on a place like Doral?
10. Thanks for the feedback you guys gave me, again it made me realise how inaccurate my initial post was. I hope this one was slightly better (there is only so much a Dutch speaking engineer can learn
)