Shivas:
I didn't worry too much about the par-3's not playing in every compass direction.
The direction of four of them (3, 9, 13 and 16) was pretty much locked in due to the shape of the property and the boundaries of the ponds and environmental easements. The fifth hole was really the only "elective" -- at one time I had #5 playing as a short 4 across the entrance road and then #6 was a par-3 into the corner, but Jeff Shearer was concerned about playing across the entrance, so we switched them back. Either way, that short hole would've played the same compass direction, anyway.
I have always thought that the four-points-of-the-compass par-3 thing is an overrated ideal, that many modern architects are slaves to just because it's an easy thing to pick on.
I do note that #5 is the longest par-3 and #13 the shortest, so the wind will not push them both of them back toward the median. If you've got your long par-3 downwind and your short 3 into the wind, then they aren't really as long or short as they claim to be.
P.S. to Tim: There is an E-W par-5 hole, it's #10.