I'm looking at these pictures and saying to myself, "What on the earth are they doing?" This doesn't look like Sand Belt, it looks like Sand Box!
Now, I know I probably should disqualify myself on the simple grounds alone that I haven't seen the bunkers in person, and only in pictures, but I do have to ask, who is constructing these bunkers, and have they built bunkers before? If they have, where at so I know where not to waste my time!
First, the finish work looks terrible in the pictures posted. You have these really angled faces until you get to the deep bays, and then the faces get even steeper. There is no flow of nature which Dr. MacKenzie taught many of your ancestors how to build when they built your great courses. This looks as if someone had no experience what-so-ever in building a bunker at all.
Second, not on is the tongue of the pronouced cape and bay so flat and characterless, it looks like it belongs on one of the many boring municipal courses here in California built by Ted Robinson. The tongue is supposed to take a natural twist or turn if you will, and in unison with its each and every line. As that line goes up, or "tilt's-up", the face below should be smoothed and angled. Why just not build this tongue out of concrete if they needed a walkway?
Third, He got that orb (tongue) in the bunker right, but failed to get the steep bays built on both sides in direction of the hole. Once again, it needs that really nice sloped face, but fails miserably.
Fourth, It looks like a concrete wall. WAY too much slope, as well as lack of interesting shape or form. On the low side, they have the root zone or thatched area of turf showing, but it's completely covered in sand on the steep face--once again, lack of knowledge to what they are doing in construction and in finish work. Is that high-faced side aimed at the green or ? ? ? ?
Five, This looks like a really nice evovled bunker that could still use a bit of TLC, but it has all of the shape and form, as well as angle of facce I'm talking about above. It would be really intereesting to see how ragged edged these bunkers were at one time. I bet they were impressive. This one still is, but it's going fast, you can tell. I can hear the bulldozer all the way here in California. It is also quite obvious that they didn't use the right equipment when they did this either.