When Donald Ross designed Mountain Ridge in 1929, he incorporated top shot bunkers on several holes.
# 5 and # 7 amongst them.
Over time all top shot bunkers were removed.
The 12th hole was altered many years ago by a misguided green chairman who planted pines in the right side of the fairway, moving the fairway well to the left, creating a dogleg hole.
Recently, the trees were removed, the fairway straightened out somewhat, two flanking stepped bunkers inserted in the left rough and the creek realigned down the right side rough.
AND, a large topshot bunker was inserted.
While the current DZ is substantially larger than the old DZ, it doesn't look that way from the tee.
The top shot bunker, in conjunction with the flanking bunkers makes the DZ look "small".
The illusion will surely intimidate the golfer, which is great, since this is a very short par 4.
Without the top shot bunker, the golfer would see the entirety of the DZ and feel far more comfortable on the tee.
At lunch today, an older golfer approached me and asked me what I thought about the hole and why the top shot bunker was reintroduced.
In addition to my "visual" answer, I stated that if one views the golf course as the architect's mission of preparing a thorough examination of the golfer's game, then surely, a single requirement of a demand drive over a short bunker is a legitimate part of that examination. A test of the "driver" in the face of a visually intimidating feature, that in reality is not the physical impediment that it appears to be.
Hence, my view on top shot bunkers is more favorably inclined, having seen how they can alter one's perspective, without undue punishment to even the poorer golfer.
Do you agree that at some point, there has to be a minimum performance standard built into architecture
I'm fairly sure that Mountain Ridge will reintroduce the other topshot bunkers in the future.
Will other clubs do the same /
I know that many, many topshot bunkers have been filled in.
Will they remain that way or regain popularity ?