Niall,
Also the game has changed since Colt days - technology in terms of golf equipment, maintenance equipment, construction approaches and types of drainage available have moved on a long way. The bunkers are there to accommodate certain distances that golfers hit the great thing is that they can be easily replaced and moved further up or made more visible which today's golfers prefer and drain much better.
Also in the last decade has seen a rise of specialist bunker companies who provide products that makes bunker easier to maintain and prevent losing sand or preventing weeds coming through. In an ideal world I would prefer to use natural materials however client will be likely to overrule it and put in artificial materials so it is cheaper and easier to maintain in the long term without having to work too much on the bunker over say 10 years or so.
Golf overall is becoming more expensive and clubs are finding ways of saving money in the long term and becoming more efficient on which areas to maintain.
Cheers
Ben
Ben, thank for your other considered reply.
If GCA was easy we wouldn't be able to celebrate the good ones! Really appreciated the candour.
Re. Moving Bunkers -
I think others far more qualified than I such as (I believe) Tom Doak consider this to be somewhat of a fool's errand, and I concur.
Who are we moving them for (the very small percentage of players) and to what prescriptive distance?
We lose variety, and as distances change in the future they need moving again?
If Rollback were to meaningfully occur (we can wish, or not) then do we move them all back again?
At my home club they removed (without any GCA involved) 2nd line/shot defence bunkers, as they were perceived as out of play, in 1994.
These were original James Braid 1907 hazards, that architecturally were very interesting as they were Cop-Style but only partially (two-thirds) across 2 holes.
So these were, as I believe Braid's work was in general, the connection/bridge between "Penal" & Stratgeic".
But no-one knew enough about Braid or cared about that back then.
Now a GCA is involved in a new bunker project and they are putting back bunkers in the exact places they were removed from as 1st line/shot hazards, albeit in very different style (hmmm...& guess what style that is!)...the definition of economic waste as prescribed by The Good Doctor c.1920!
The new technology can work and that along with simpler, smaller, well-considered hazards (or grass instead of sand) may be the way forward for Clubs so that they still give interest, fun and challenge while saving on maintenance...but we mustn't lose the quirk!
Cheers