IF the golf course was built as an amenity to sell real estate, there's a good chance the below could happen..
which describes most of the drivel built since 1980(easily spotted by the now abandoned guard house and $29 GOLFNOW green fee-cart included of course)
1.the golf course is routed in all the low points and or flood plains to provide views from higher ground for homes(Atlanta-the bastion of bad development golf)
2.the golf course is spread out and unwalkable between holes because getting 22 lots on one hole is better than 14
3. houses are located on both sides, equidistant from the center lines of the fairway
4. the best land and interesting contours are not considered for the golf, but rather the golf is put where the most and best homesites can't be built
5. the architect then takes what the land planner has left him and puts in the obligatory bunker left-bunker right
6.Average Joe comments on GOLFNOW how smooth and fast the greens are, and that the "traps" are "consistent
There are many courses (North Berwick,TOC , Bude , Prestwick St. Nicholas , Riviera etc.) where the housing enhances the holes because the course/routing was not compromised to build them. Some housing and yes even tight OB can enhance, influene strategy and be really cool in small doses, but a course routed with OB houses down both sides every hole(no matter how wide the corridors) sucks both aesthetically and strategically