As we look to the most viable future for the game, it may be instructive to look to the past.
Time constraints of folks in a hyper-activated world and acreage costs associated with resource, water, and growth constraints continue to challenge the very existence of many of our present courses as well as the feasibility of any new ones.
Golf and the creation of its courses over the centuries was a much more practical and prudent exercise than what it has evolved into. While historical records show the game was played at least as far back as the 1400s, largely in Scotland along seaside meadows (i.e. links), it wasn't until 1764, just prior to the American Revolution, that St. Andrews consolidated a few holes from its 22 holes to become an 18 hole golf course.
While it is often believed today that this change had an immediate impact on other clubs given St. Andrews stature as the "home of golf", that would be surprisingly incorrect. In fact, while there were no less than 32 known golf courses in existence one hundred years later, it wasn't until Old Tom Morris rearranged the links at Westward Ho! at the Royal North Devon Golf Club in 18 holes in August of 1864, 100 years after St. Andrews, that the second 18 hole course came into existence.
I've been reading a book titled "Why Are There Eighteen Holes" by Peter N. Lewis that meticulously details the growth of the game between 1764 and 1890.
From that book we find the following practical reality;
"We have already seen that traditionally the number of holes on Scottish courses was largely determined by the land available rather than trying to impose a preconceived idea of the number of holes on the land. In 1874 there were five, six, seven,, eight, nine, ten, twelve, thirteen, fifteen, seventeen and eighteen hole courses in Scotland. In England and the Channel Islands, there were seven, nine, ten, fourteen, and eighteen hole courses."
I have to wonder if the standardization of number of holes to eighteen has been good for golf, or a viable path forward for the game. Food for thought.