I'm sure every course changes over time and is tinkered with (by supers if not architects), but that strikes me as very different than consciously directed and large-scaled renovations aimed at 'keeping up with the times' -- e.g moving tees further back, altering greens, adding bunkers etc. As Shel mentioned, Crystal Downs seems to have gone many decades without any of that, and Lawsonia too, and as Tommy and JE note, Holston Hills. And from reading here over the years, others come to my mind (rightly or wrongly): Fishers Island, Eastward Ho, Garden City -- they all seem to have gone decades without feeling the need to 'modernize' themselves to 'stay relevant' because of the 'new era' in design or the 'latest equipment'. To Mark's perspective, granted, there may not be *many* such courses, but there must be more than *none*. There must be a few (in America) that were guided by a philosophy akin to the British one that Colin mentions, i.e. Worlington's "any change is bad" -- which is not too far from saying that *all* change is bad. Or to put it more elegantly: omnis mutatio est malum