I used to be a stickler for designing in favor of surface drainage and putting as little into pipes as possible. I felt that pipe was a waste of money and that it encouraged over-shaping.
A major factor in getting my routings right is to avoid drainage problems -- by locating the landing areas and greens in spots that feature natural surface drainage, and skipping over and around any areas where drainage tends to collect. There was almost zero subsurface drainage [apart from tile drains under the greens and bunkers] at High Pointe, Black Forest, Stonewall, Beechtree, Lost Dunes, or Apache Stronghold ... and, more recently, at Cape Kidnappers and Rock Creek and Dismal River. They all relied 100% on surface drainage.
On top of that, I later learned, if you collect the water straight into a pipe and discharge it straight into a water body that is the worst solution environmentally, because any chemicals or fertilizer residue will go straight into the water body with the run-off.
At Pacific Dunes, the entire site was a series of sandy pockets, with a random depth to a sandstone layer that would hold water. We had to pipe the bigger pockets, but instead of bringing open drains to the top, we kept loops of perforated tile just under the surface to take the water in ... a method we had borrowed from Kingsbarns, who borrowed it from work that had been done on The Old Course at St. Andrews a few years prior. Over time, some of those drains have gotten clogged and had to be dug up, but it sure as heck beat having your ball collect on an inlet in the fairways for all these years. We have used the same method on other sandy sites that were relatively flat. But we did not put in any such drainage at Barnbougle or Ballyneal, because the sand seemed to take all the water we put on it, and there is really no good place to run drains to.
On my two big earthmoving projects -- The Legends and The Rawls Course -- there are major trunk drainage lines to take all the run-off to the ditches [at The Legends] or the irrigation pond [at Rawls]. I tried to be efficient in finding just a few main points to collect as much water as possible, instead of having little pockets everywhere.
I do think our approach to drainage [and my stubbornness about it] is one of the things that makes our courses look different than most other new courses, although hardly anybody notices what the underlying reason is.