Tom,
Thanks for the answer and insights there. No doubt the fact that three different people oversaw the building of courses would do a lot to insure there were plenty of differences. It would be hard to imagine a situation where 3 different people interpreted drawings in the same way anywhere unless they were so extremely detailed that following them to the tee resulted in the exact same product. You could answer this for sure but would it be realistic to even have the same product on the same site with 3 different people overseeing the construction?
It also for me strengthens the belief that some of these guys are receiving almost too much credit, if Mackenzie show up for one day to walk and create a quick sketch and then left and years later out popped one of the best courses in the world that would be largely if not wholly attributed to him then there are some serious unsung heros that we overlook. When has a modern architect spent only a day at a site that resulted in a great end result. Has that even happenend? Not to my knowledge at least.
You suggested you were in a good place to be able to answer for Mackenzie which I definitely agree with however, you are in an even better position to answer with regards to yourself and Barnbougle, Tara Iti and Pacific Dunes. All wonderful sandbased sites, rugged dunes, links golf, excellent walkable routings, great mix of short and long holes and variation. What two differences would you most want the lucky people that are privelidged enough to see them to take away?
David:
Of course I could write a book on the differences between my own courses [and, in fact, I'm working on one], but if I had to summarize them into two or three key points it would be:
1. Like Dr. MacKenzie's, my work is enhanced by my associates' contributions, and I see that as a feature not a bug. I also like to keep rotating different people into those roles so that my courses DO have differences.
2. Also, like any artist, every new piece of work is a reaction to what's come before it and all the other influences on me personally at any given time. Occasionally you will find an homage to a hole from some other course that hosted a major event the year we were building ours, because it got me thinking about that course again. My mood changes, and so do my courses.
3. For the three courses you named, each had a different client and a different lead associate for starters, but these are other individual differences:
a. At Pacific Dunes, we had a client who'd expressed real concern over "severe greens", even though I'd played enough golf with him to know that he liked some greens I'd consider severe. My response was to start slowly on the first few greens, make them smaller, and put the contour on the exterior edges, where it would still come into play but not lead to a dreaded "three-putt" even though you might well be using your putter for the shot from off the green. I also was conscious about playing with the sizes of greens [they are between 4,000 and 9,000 square feet] to contrast with the large greens at Bandon Dunes.
b. At Barnbougle, we had a client who wasn't really a golfer, and we were far from civilization, so I reasoned that we could get away with bolder, wilder ideas - which fit the nature of the ground we had to work with. I remember joking with Richard Sattler that if my 13th green didn't work out, it wouldn't matter because few of my critics would see it anyway. That freedom to be more creative shows itself throughout the course. Our one restriction there was budget ... the course is narrower as a result, and we used areas of open sand to compensate and try to minimize lost balls in the marram.
c. For Tara Iti, I once again had free reign from the client, but he was a well-traveled golfer so it wasn't quite as free-flowing as Barnbougle. Tara Iti was MUCH harder to build than the other two courses because all the contours had to be rebuilt following clearing and root grubbing, and all of the site had to be revegetated, if not with grass than with native plants in the dune areas. This leads to the course being wider in spots than absolutely necessary for golf, just to break up the monotony of the revegetated areas. Design-wise, the greens are more like Pacific Dunes', but there are several with large areas that aren't pinnable ... steep natural slopes that can be used as backstops or feeders. We don't use such features on most of our courses, because it can be seen as a waste of space, but here again, it helped to give the course more shape and form instead of having a sandy perimeter right close to the hole locations on every green.