I have nothing substantive to contribute, but I was struck by an idea this year that may be relevant to this topic. Some years ago, I played a Palm Springs course and was perplexed by the design. I thought it was a beautiful work of landscape art, yet it just seemed to lack soul as a golf course. I started a thread about “opulent golf” more or less wondering what I was missing or didn’t understand. I went back this year and played the course again. Since the course was totally created by earthmoving on a flat site, I wondered if process of constructing it was greatly influenced by conceiving it first as routing, creating conceptual drawings of each hole, and then by a set of plans that a contractor could use to build a “footprint” for each hole. In other words, design on paper (CAD) and hand off to a contractor to build. I have no idea how it was built, but had the thought that perhaps the disconnect I felt between this magnificent, 3D sculpted landscape and the actual golf played over it may be the result of a era when this sort of process was SOP.
Every component of this course shrieked that no expense was spared to make it a wonderful golf experience. However, for me at least, it just didn’t compare to others I’ve played that were designed and built on better land or using a more adaptable process of evolution and construction. Don’t get me wrong, I think it is a fine course and serves its purpose, for that those that afford it, and clearly it provides a lot of jobs to maintain it.
Now back to those who have something to say.