Bill
I think the front location (either side) is more difficult than a rear location...still, two totally different shots.
As for the question, there seems to be a school of thought which thinks the copies are the real Redans. I have only seen one true template and it is a totally different animal to NB's version. Can't see how the original isn't a Redan, but copies such as at YHC are, but this is an old discussion that will never be resolved.
Ciao
Sean,
Of course we can resolve it. I just wasn't part of all the old discussions!
Some people go to the dictionary and find the definition of the miltary fortress called a redan. They seem to like the idea of comparing how a golf hole defends against the golfer's approach versus how a redan fort helps defend against attacking soldiers. People go on to make comments about specific Redan holes based upon how well the hole seems to follow military principles, as Thomas Dai just did above. I understand that: it is kind of cool to think of a golf hole in military terms. It is 100% wrong, but I get it.
As I have said before, the hole at NB was NOT designed with a redan fortress in mind. It was just a golf hole that apparantly had some features that reminded a retired soldier of his time at war in Sevastopol. My money is on the wood-faced front left bunker. In any event, the nickname Redan stuck. Macdonald and others came to admire the hole, so they copied its best GOLFING features, built their own par threes, and called them Redans. At no time did they resort to manuals on proper redan fort construction... Some looked at what was on the ground at N.B., others probably looked at what Macdonald built. Personally, I think Charles Banks simply made CBM's key features bigger. So his Redan bunkers tended to be deeper, and his kick mounds higher. (His Road Hole bunker at my course is at least three time bigger than #17 at TOC.) Raynor never saw N.B. so he just built his holes as CBM described them.
Come to think of it, I was a little disappointed in the two Tom Doak Redans that I had played: Old Macdonald and Pacific Dunes because I thought the kick mounds were not dramatic enough. But that was before I played N.B. where the kick mound is not very dramatic, as Lou Doran commented above. So perhaps T.D. did a better of capturing what is on the ground at N.B. than some others...
What Macdonald built at NGLA is superb in terms of being faithful to the original.
So to state the obvious, the hole at North Berwick is the original Redan. All the others are copies and we can discuss if some of the copied features are improvements from the original, or not as good. But the analysis MUST be from a golfing perspective, not military.