I love the use of the drawing! Land contours present the most interesting options for my tastes but it is so difficult to demonstrate them with pictures.
One of my favorites is the 12th at Waveland Muni in Des Moines, Iowa. It is a 575 yard par five with a big hill that appears to have been bulldozed flat at the top with the flat spot starting at 130 yards from the middle of the green and ending 70 yards short of the green. The hill is very steep so if you are short you have a 150 yard blind shot from an uphill lie. If you get to the top, the closer you get to the far edge, the more visible the shot becomes. However, you need to skirt the right side to avoid running through the fairway. If you get your second over the flat spot and keep it right, it will run next to the green. There were a number of potential lines off the tee that yielded either a flat lie or a shorter distance for that 2nd shot. The shot makes the tee shot interesting because you could hug the right side of the slight dogleg right to shorten the distance (dramatically if you caught a downslope) or hit to the left for a better angle from a flat lie.
The fairway was not irrigated when I was a kid so a hot August day with a south wind made getting the ball next to the green a possibility. Last time I played there the fairway was watered and the flat fairway on the left side that typically was my target was now in the rough.
None of this is evident from the aerial photo - these coordinates mark the fairway if you want to look: 41.596823,-93.686022