I read someplace that the reason the Red Sea is called the ‘red’ sea is because way back when they first named it, people’s eyes and/or sense of colour differed from our own, such that they actually saw it as ‘red’.
Not a good analogy, but I think our golf ancestors may have seen courses differently than we do — they looked for other things, and saw what they were looking for.
The ‘sense of place’ and of ‘history’ that the classic golden age courses now have and that appear to us now as lovely came with the many years and decades that have since passed — ie they have a sense of place in part because they themselves are (and have shaped) those very places; and they are historical because we ourselves make them so, simply by coming after them and continuing to honour them.
Where some of today’s new courses miss, I think, is in trying too hard and/or too obviously for an *instant* sense of place and of history;
and where some of today’s renovations miss, I think, is in superimposing in too ham-fisted a way a modern notion of beauty and naturalism onto a design-course that originally focused on other things and that conceived of those terms in different ways.
And the reason some new courses and recent renovations work as well as they do and strike a near-perfect balance is, I think, more a function of architectural talent and skill than of some accurate capturing of ‘original’ beauty and aesthetics.