Tom Doak,
Amazing design, is it the biggest budget you have worked with?
How did that affect the design process?
Stone Eagle was the most expensive construction project we've done in the U.S.A. Dredging several million yards of fill in China wasn't cheap, either, but it's almost impossible to compare costs over there.
As I explained above, though, we benefitted greatly from all the features of the site, which gave us many things to hold onto in the grading process. It wasn't a wall-to-wall grading exercise where you have to make invented features look natural. We had a lot of great features to tie back into -- not just the rock pinnacles, but the ravine going up the left side of #5, or the saddle behind #6 green, or the deep crossing ravine which became the bunker on the right of #8 fairway after we filled across to the left of it -- and many of them were so steep that you could cut or fill several feet right up against them without it looking out of character. So we just had to take big equipment and melt down all the ruggedness in between those features into something you could mow, that wasn't too steep for a ball to stop.
Of course, the more work you've got to do, the slower the process. It's tough to work at a stop-and-start pace where you only have a couple of holes at a time to do creative work on, and then you have to wait for the big machines again. Working in sand is a whole lot faster, so it's easier to stay in a creative groove. On the other hand, there were a couple of holes where Eric had enough time to think of an alternative to our original plan that involved moving less earth and coming up with a cooler hole. The approach to #2 is one of those; #15 is another.
John K: I remember very clearly that many of the heat-exhausted players at the King's Putter did not like the course at all. I've had chances to spend time there the past two winters, and I just think they're nuts. I'm somewhere between a 5 and a 14-handicap, so maybe your quote is correct, that high handicappers would hate the course, which you could also say about a bunch of courses rated more highly than Stone Eagle. But the membership is not exactly brimming with low handicappers, so I'm not sure it's right that the average player can't enjoy it.