As to the architecture of the course if it’s a great classic and you have the original design there’s your plan. Taking away the damage leaves the jewel.
I really wish this was the case, but you’re making some assumptions here.
Shocking as it might be to hear, there exists other opinions by non-GCA denizens that malign the ODGs and do not place value on the integrity of the original design.
These same people do not know the difference between “good greens” and “good putting surfaces”. They believe good greens mean fast and true, not interesting, challenging, well integrated with surrounds, etc.
My point is punctuated as follows: take 5 courses on the north shore of Chicago that were designed by ODGs in the 20s. Ask the current membership to name the original architect and I will wager that less than 25% of rank and file members can answer that correctly.
The “golf IQ” of the average club board And greens committee is shockingly low. EXCEPT at bespoke golf clubs that feature their original GCA at the center of their perceived brand.
Any work discussed and proposed by a GCA in today’s Club market must be funded. Duh. Clubs have a choice:
1. Balance sheet funding if they are lucky and have the cash on hand.
2. take on debt. OK in strong markets but scary if the economy gets shaky.
3. Assess the membership.
In most cases, except at high end GOLF clubs again, there must be a vote where the membership approves the work. Now your problem is 10x more challenging as you need to articulate to the rank and file membership why you want to spend money, charge them for it and say their course will be “better”.
But, make a pitch to a board and a membership that you are embarking on a 3-5-10 year plan that will save the Club “$300k/yr.” in labor, chemicals, overtime and equipment, then I ASSURE you there will be interest by the lawyers, investment bankers, PE Guys, bean counters and CEOs in the room.
At the risk of needling Tom again...:-)...RDG and all the “RDG Cubs” out there are smart enough to vet the clubs and gravitate to assignments where these issues are avoided.