Soils are very important to golf course design. Much of my career success has been in finding so many sandy sites to work on.
After a summer of construction work with Pete Dye at Long Cove, having the importance of drainage drilled into my head - even though Long Cove was a sandy site - I went and spent my year in the U.K. and noticed how many of the coolest features on the old courses were features that did not surface drain! In the U.K. you have lots of surface drainage going into bunkers, and many many pockets where drainage collects [some of them tiny, and others fairly large], even on greens. Which makes perfect sense, because those courses were built before irrigation was common to golf courses, and collecting a little more water onto a green surface was actually a good thing, as long as it didn't stand on the surface for long.
So then I got back to America, and started noticing how many cool features on famous courses don't surface drain, either. Those great surrounds at Pinehurst No. 2 are full of little pockets that don't drain. NGLA has about 20 drainage pockets in its greens [I noticed because one spring they were all dead from ice damage]. Sand Hills and Ballyneal and Pacific Dunes are nothing but interconnected bowls that don't surface drain. It's way easier to design a course [or do finish work] when a drainage pocket isn't an existential problem.
In heavier soils, yes, you do have to be keenly aware of surface drainage issues, on both the micro scale [around features you are building] and the macro scale [how water drains across the site and off the site]. And after seven months of construction in Houston, you don't have to tell me how much more the weather can affect one's construction schedule when you're on heavy soils. Other than that, though, it's not like you have to take twenty different approaches to construction for twenty different kinds of soils. You either have to worry a lot about surface drainage, or you don't.
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