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GolfClubAtlas.com => Golf Course Architecture => Topic started by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 13, 2002, 07:14:04 PM

Title: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 13, 2002, 07:14:04 PM
The thread analyzing the aesthetic appeal of Raynor got me thinking about the great courses occupying flat sites. Yeamans Hall and Chicago were two on relatively flat land that came to mind, they seem to be a combination of bold architectural features and untouched level ground that seems to work extremely well. The open grasslands of Chicago and the backdrop of the marsh at YH - what is it about Raynor's style and those particular flat sites that seems to work?

MacKenzie experimented on flat sites at Bayside and the Jockey Club with very bold mounding, bold greens, minimal bunkering, and an open architectural style which was a precursor to the hardly flat ANGC.

Garden City and Royal Worlington are two more that come to mind, and Gib's latest assessment of Chesessee Creek as bullet proof 9 (top twenty-five in the world) on very flat ground. (The antithesis to these courses is Shadow Creek which was built on a very flat site, taking its own unique approach and is universally praised)

What are some other great courses on flat or flattish sites, and what makes these courses great? Are there any common characteristics?
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 13, 2002, 07:21:07 PM
Perhaps the larger question is can a course on a flat site be truly great?  Or can it only aspire for very good?
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Chris Kane on February 13, 2002, 07:28:49 PM
I'd venture to say that a course on a flat site can only be very good: blah architecture on an undulating site works better than blah architecture on a flat site.

An architect would have to do something pretty special to get some interest into a completely level site.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 13, 2002, 07:31:57 PM
Tom

In terms of your last question, of course "flatness" should not disqualify any course from "greatness", if we were all (or any) completely objective.  Regrettably, we are not, and we let things such as "ambience" cloud our vision.

In terms of the former question, of the courses I have played, my favorite flat ones are:  TPC-Sawgrass, Hoylake, Carnoustie, Harbour Town, Royal Cinq-Ports-Deal, and , of course, the Old Course and the New Course.  Only one of those (Carnoustie) could even aspire to be truly "great."  Why?  I don't know!  Good question!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Gib_Papazian on February 13, 2002, 09:06:32 PM
Tom,

My assessment of Chechessee as a "bulletproof 9" was meant in reference to the Golfweek Modern Top 100 list. Top 25 in the world is a tough stretch - but Top 100 in the world would not make me blink.

As to flat courses, let us not forget Westhampton.

I'mn going to throw in one in the California Central Valley that was built on a fairly flat site and that is Stevinson Ranch.

Sometimes a flat site contains interest not in rolls on the property but in a more two-dimensional sense using  waterways, creeks and  bunkering to give the course some interesting geometry.

Succession is so close to being truly outstanding - and that site is absolutely flat. It is tough for a California wussy like me to get used to enormous repiles sunning themselves along the fairways though . . . . :o

That said, to echo the obseravations of Brains Goodale, I guess St. Andrews wins the prize, though Carnoustie is right up there.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Brad Klein on February 13, 2002, 09:16:06 PM
The real skill of a designer is to build something out of nothing. Nobody in the postwar era has done this better than Pete Dye.

Harbour Towne. Hilton Head, S.C., is by far his greatest achievement in this sense, but similar brilliance in shaping by lowering one edge and creating contour can be seen at: PGA West-Stadium Course; TPC-Sawgrass Stadium Course, Ponte vedra Beach, Fla.; The Golf Club, New Albany, Ohio; Crooked Stick, Carmel, Ind.; and at one of his unheralded achievements, Firethorn in Lincoln, Neb.

Anybody can take a rolling or pitched site and build a good golf course. But to create interesting shapes out of dead ground is really tough.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Slag_Bandoon on February 13, 2002, 09:24:42 PM
 Talking Stick has bold bunkers and arroyos that make you forget sometimes how flat the Earth is on that site.  The eye looks for edges and features, sometimes they just happen to be 200 yards away.  It gives a wonderful open feeling with the sky, especially when it's blue.  Much appreciated by this Norwestern mud dweller.  
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Mike_Cirba on February 13, 2002, 09:29:13 PM
Twisted Dune is the best example of making something out of nothing that I've seen in recent years, although it's about as "minimalist" as Whistling Straits.  Still, I found it to be better shaped and the created features tie in much better.  The attention to detail is truly superb.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: RJ_Daley on February 13, 2002, 09:44:47 PM
Cassique was as flat as any site.  It was previously a series of tomato gardens.  I have only seen it, not played it, so I don't know how good it is.  But, it ain't flat anymore. :o

I can't wait for Doak's Lubbock, TX work.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 14, 2002, 04:14:17 AM
From what I have seen the more open the flattish course is the more interesting it becomes, although TPC and Harbour Town are exceptions. There something about the openess at Chicago that makes it seem less flat. Another common practice seems to be bold hazzards and greens.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Paul Turner on February 14, 2002, 05:15:56 AM
It depends what you mean by flat.  Rich's examples of Deal and St Andrews (parts of Hoylake and Carnoustie too) are only flat on the large scale, they're anything but on the playing scale.

Casa de Campo is generally flat.  Dye kept the interest on the inland holes by building a varied and great set of greens and a wide variety of bunkers, in position, angle and size.

Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Jeff Mingay on February 14, 2002, 05:57:56 AM
Brad Klein already made the point above, but Dr. MacKenzie may have put it best when he wrote, "The test of a good golf architect is the power of converting bad inland material into a good course, and not the power of fashioning excellent seaside material into a mediocre one."

I used this quote in reference to Donald Ross' subtely brilliant work at Essex and Roseland in Windsor, Ont. in my forthcoming Essex club history. The same quote could also be applied to Ross' eariler work at Detroit Golf Club.

He passed the test!

About 1928, Ross wrote, "In these days of steamshovels and modern improvements, it is possible to do wonderful things on flat, level country. I have come to the conclusion that I prefer to lay out a course on level land."

I've always considered this to be a very interesting quote from Ross.

Robert Hunter had similar feelings about flat land. In The Links (1926), he wrote, "Wholly flat land is rarely thought to be desirable for golf, and it is likely to be chosen only as a last resource. I am quite sure this is a mistaken view. Not only some of the most popular but some of the most interesting courses have been made on flat land."

I think Ross proved how easy it can be to lay out a solid courses. A good routing of 18 diverse holes, complimented by 18 unique, interesting green complexes is all you need.

Roseland is a great example of this fact. Between the tees and greens is basically nothing -- flat farmland with a few subtle humps and bumps; but nothing great. But the greens are so interesting and so unqiue from one another, and each and every hole is so different from the others, that the course is infinitely fun to play.

You're not going to compete in the "Wow Factor" category with the Fazio's of the world laying out courses on flat land in a Ross-style these days. But you will succeed in producing timless layouts; which, in the end, is best for the game...
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Jeff_Lewis on February 14, 2002, 06:07:03 AM
Here is a radical idea...I would prefer dead flat to extremely hilly any day. Garden City, Seminole, Talking Stick, Royal Liverpool, Kingston Heath, most of the Surrey courses...all are on fairly flat terrain. A good designer can definitely put enough strategic interest into a level site...Overly severe terrain is almost impossible to design around and leads to the creation of courses designed for views instead of for golf.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: George Pazin on February 14, 2002, 08:12:50 AM
Paul Turner beat me to it, so I'll just second his statement that TOC is only flat on a large scale. In fact, it seems to me that the wrinkled ground that it occupies is more conducive to interesting golf than some of the long rolling hills that are more conventional terrain, at least in the US.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tyler Kearns on February 14, 2002, 10:38:54 AM
I believe C.B. Macdonald liked the prospect of a flat site, because without large hills regulating the routing plan, Macdonald could manipulate the lengths of the holes at will. This would ensure a variety of distances that would test all the faculties of the golfer, ie. use all the clubs in the bag.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 14, 2002, 10:50:28 AM
Paul and George

You are both right, of course, in that TOC, Carnoustie, Deal, etc. are not "flat" at the micro level, but then again, no golf course is, including all the others I and others have listed on this thread.  That was not the point, I think.  Rather, the point is can you build a great course on a site without the significant elevations changes which lead to great vistas and to golf holes or shots that take advantage of these changes?  I think that the answer is yes.

Rich

PS--George, glad to see you have moved back away from the dark side.  I was getting nervous too when you started agreeing with me! ;)
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 14, 2002, 12:38:16 PM
Tom MacW:

This topic doesn't seem to be all that much different than the "Raynor Pardox" topic except on this thread the subject is about "flat" or "level" sites. A lot of the discussion on the other topic involved NGLA which really can't be considered a flat or level site due to some of the extreme and unique topography of some of it. So I'm assuming that's the difference between these topics to you.

I noticed on this topic you ask what is so appealing about the bold architectural features on a flat site like Yeamans, Chicago and some of the others that are mentioned. You did say you thought the flat but open backdrops might have something to do with it I assume when you ask what's so appealing about them that you think they are. But then you say the antithesis is Shadow Creek.

Could you explain in as much detail as possible why you think a course like Shadow Creek on an almost dead flat site is not appealing while courses like Yeamans and Chicago etc on other dead flat sites are?

I hate to second guess you but would the primary reason be, in your opinion, because  on the other earlier examples (Yeamans, Chicago), only tees, bunkers et al and greens, for instance, were manufactured and the remainder of the land and the holes were left as they found them? Is that the primary reason you find one appealing and the other not appealing?

I would also totally, totally second the statements of those that made big distinctions between relatively level sites, dead flat sites devoid of any kind of interest on the ground, sites with lots of elevation change and particularly a site like TOC!

To me TOC is possibly the best example of a basically level site (very little elevation change) that might just have more NATURAL interest on the ground in the way of more low profile NATURAL features that are about the best that can be found for golf than any other site in the world. The land looks like someone crumpled up a piece of paper tightly and then straighten it out again. To see the old course in a low level aerial with the sun low shows it as one of the most NATURALLY FEATURE FILLED sites that can be found anywhere!

In this sense when you are speaking of Yeamans, Chicago et al and Shadow Creek too as "flat" or "level" sites, I'm assuming they are all about as much the antithesis of TOC as could be found in your opinion. Am I right?

So what do you find so appealing about a Chicago G.C. and so unappealing about Shadow Creek? Is it just the reason(s) I mentioned?
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Paul Richards on February 14, 2002, 01:34:56 PM
Tom:
This thread reminds me of a previous one, because I know
I mentioned Evanston Golf Club near Chicago before.

Evanston is proof-positive of just what a great course
designer Donald Ross was.  

The course is so dead-flat, that you probably wouldn't need
to move any dirt to make it a parking lot for Wal-Mart.

But, because of Ross' genius, he made this flat site into
a very fun and interesting golf course.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: George Pazin on February 14, 2002, 02:24:51 PM
Rich -

I think we're almost discussing 2 different things on this thread. There is flat, as in little elevation change, & there is dead flat, as in little elevation change & dead flat land. I think that land with little elevation change can still be fascinating if it has interesting small contours, while some sites with good elevation changes are more dull if the changes are too long & gradual. Here in western PA we have lots of elevation changes, but sometimes its good & sometimes it just means a tougher walk.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 14, 2002, 02:35:27 PM
Not necessarily so, George.  TPC-Sawgrass was built on dead flat land (actually a lot of it was under water) at both the macro and micro level, yet Dye manufactured some nice little elevation changes at both the micro and macro level.  C&C are in the process of creating some great golf holes at Friar's Head on an old potato field.  The "poofs" that we will find there are largely Bill Coore's creations, not god's (unless Bill is god!).
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: ian andrew (Guest) on February 14, 2002, 08:38:58 PM
Tom, to offer a possible answer to the question you posted about Raynor. I wonder if its the contrast he manufactured. The site is dominated by the wide sweeping horizontal lines of the land including many long unbroken views. His contrast is the sharp verticle edges of his architectural forms (bunkers, green sites). I feel that his forms do not compete with the natural flow of the land, therefore they blend best.

Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 02:48:35 AM
Rich:

Just so you get your deities straight, "poofs" are not God's or Bill Coore's, they're Perry Maxwells and they're almost exclusively on greens by Perry. They just happen to be called "poofs" by Bill Coore. That word may have even popped into his head while explaining a very low profile little moundish affair on #10 green at GMGC. We were walking around looking at the green and he spotted one of the little things and said: "See that, that's classic Perry Maxwell, it's almost not noticeable but it sort of goes, ah, ah, you know, POOF!

Really good "Perry poofs" are wonderful and sometimes not particular apparent when putting and occasionally with the unaware can swing a ball as hard as the praire wind!

We do tend to take these little nuances as well as other architectural matters very seriously, though, and we should recognize that although some of the great architects like MacKenzie and Maxwell may have too, they also may have happened upon things in a far less serious, more mundane or even accidental way!

We know, for instance, that one nine on one of America's great courses which Alister proclaimed to Perry was an excellent nine, Perry had to inform him that it was, in fact, an excellent 8 hole nine! But no matter, we know that they both were able to manage a very cool uphill par 3 into the nine to complete it! What is not known, however, is whether they had to move the clubhouse to accomodate it or perhaps even Lake Michigan itself!

We know both MacKenzie and Maxwell may have been very quick studies architecturally, creating and conceiving of things extremely rapidly and also in and out of town like wraiths. We know Perry was an early morning designer and most of the rest of the day could probably be found at the local symphony orchestra!

Which brings up some interesting speculation! The real "poofmeister" may not have been Perry at all but his elusive "Forgotten Man" who carried out Perry's early morning instructions during the rest of the day when Perry was at the orchestra!

But anyway, "poofs" are some of the best green surface features there are and Coore is very good at them too. There's a fantastic one towards the center of PVGC's left #9 green, by the way!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 15, 2002, 04:02:01 AM
(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/00000153.jpg)
Garden City

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/00000207.jpg)
Yeamans Hall

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/rwn2.jpg)
Royal worlington

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/seminole17.jpg)
Seminole

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/riviera10.jpg)
Riviera

I'm not focused on what Raynor's secret for success was on flat sites, but what characteristics are common among many very good flat courses. Here are five examples of courses (or holes) built on what be considered generally flat sites. I agree with those who say they aren't really flat. The profile is level but the reason they are fun are their numerous smallish (and not so smallish) bumps and hollows. There is also a feeling of openness with these examples which I think lessens the feeling of flatness. If you are crammed in treed corridors like at Harbour Town, I think the flatness is magnified. They also seem to blend into their environments, you get a feeling they belong and have not been forced in. That may be a result of the architect accepting the flatness and working to create interesting hazards to set up excellent strategies. All these courses exhibit bold architectural features both bunkers and green complexes (that doesn't neccessarily mean elevated or built up). They are not all engineered in appearance or even above ground (in the case of Garden City's pits) but they are none the less bold adding to the interesting strategies they set up.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Paul Richards on February 15, 2002, 04:58:28 AM
Tom:

Although Seminole's topography is MUCH more rolling than
Evanston's, you get the idea of Ross's intelligence when
you look at the above picture, because this is the type of
look he gave to dead-flat Evanston, and pulled it off!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 07:48:14 AM
Tom MacW:

Nice photos and a particularly good spectrum for this topic. I think all of them look good but they certainly look very different from each other in many ways.

The Raynor and Ross holes have aspects of them that are noticeable manufactured--hard not to notice, in fact. Some of the overall lines of that manufacturing blend into the basic lines of the site well, others don't. Look for instance at the lines of the bunkering on #17 Seminole. Not only the horizontal top edges of the bunkering but also where the grass meets the sand both in front and in back on the bunkers and how those lines flow really well horizontally with the land! But the vertical faces don't at all and give both greens and bunkering a manufactured look!

Very much the same (and more so) with Raynor's hole. The top line of the green and both grass lines of the bunkers blend with the extreme horizontalness of the overall site but the green and the bunker faces are sharply manufactured up and extremely noticeable in an engineered context.

This certainly does a number of things to both the playability and the visual aspects of the green--it surely effects both playability and depth perception. What would you think of the look of the green if he'd dropped the whole green down to near the height of the sand? That might look extremely low profile and maybe even boring, don't you think?

But then what if he's kept everything at the same level and just made up for it in both the shape (the outside edges and angles of the green) in some varied and interesting ways? And maybe made the bunkering follow it or surround it in other interesting ways or maybe even the same way as it is?

That would effect both the playability and the visual aspects as well don't you think? And if he could get away with that in playability (strategy) it could also make the whole green and the bunkering too really blend in with the horizontalness of the site. He would have just designed out the ubrupt manufactured verticalness!

If he could have gotten away with that in both playability and visual proportion on such an extremely flat site, he may have then done something very interesting. I recognize that there are many other architectural considerations like drainage and such, even again playability and that the green is a pushup and to do what I'm saying might require sinking a pushup green, but we're talking degrees here to blend things and obviously it could be done somehow!

That Garden City shot is about the definition of everything blending into the lines of the site, in my opinion. That's about as minimal and natural as you can find and I actually remember thinking that when looking at that green and hole. It almost looks like the entire hole was just layed on the ground and in fact it might have been!

Worlington's hole looks to me real natural and it too might just be a "lay of the land" natural landform green and hole--the lines look like that to me.

But Thomas's hole may be the best of all to me because you can see what he did architcturally but he blended everything about his architecture into that natural hole site so well. All the lines of his manufactured architecture both horizontally, vertically and length-wise (distance-wise) blend naturally into that hole site. And the proportion of his features to the entire hole site are so wonderful too!

There is one interesting thing to me though about Thomas's hole. Although I've never played Riviera I did walk it very slowly and study it very carefully.

That broad bunker scheme across the front is very interesting to me. Architecturally I think it's doing some of the things that Gil Hanse has done on at least one and maybe a number of his par 3s.

I would just think that in a basic strategic context that broad bunker scheme should bow away from the golfer instead of towards him!! But if it did think how different it would make the entire hole look! It would sort of reverse some really beautiful proportion that seems to make the architectural features fit with and blend in naturally with the entire setting. Architecturally it might even be considered a strategic giveaway to proportion!

Gil, by the way, in this context, on a hole like #14 Inniscrone has an unusually long and large fairway running into the par 3 green site, far more than anyone would ever need to functionally play on. When I asked him about that he said it just created a much better proportion throughout the entire hole and made it all blend together naturally instead of having what might appear to be a segmented green site about 170yd out there!

The same was true in the restoration planning of GMGC. On our #14 I asked him if we just couldn't borrow some seemingly excessive fairway turf from the front of a long fairway strip on this 185yd par 3 and he said the same thing---although the front of this excessive fairway strip might not be functional for any of our golfers it did create the proper proportion to make the green end blend in better and also with the overall hole site.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: John_D._Bernhardt on February 15, 2002, 08:10:14 AM
Paul, Seminole has a large sand ridge running through it. while several holes are flat, great use of the ridge was made to incorporate as many holes as possible to it.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 08:11:12 AM
Tom

Mea culpa.  I didn't know that Perry Maxwell had designed the greens on the Old Course and all the other great Scottish links that are filled with "poofs!"  The good ole boy really got around, didn't he!  You live and learn, don't you!

BTW--don't use that phase "(the) Scottish links are filled with poofs" when you get over there.  Some thoughtless soul might take your head off!

Cheers

Rich
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 09:29:32 AM
JohnB:

Actually Seminole is highly unusual for Florida because it has two ridges not running through it but running on both the eastern and western borders of the property with the middle being flat or almost a valley due to the two parallel north to south ridges on either side.

There's nothing unusual at all about a Florida course having a dune ridgeline along the ocean but the western ridgeline on the other side of the property paralleling the ocean really is unusual for Florida and this is particularly the ridgeline Ross made very clever use of!

His nines are basically side by side but he did get the holes on both nines pretty well spinning around the compass which is a good thing on a wind site like that one.

I believe that Ross's routing style throughout his career was basically all the high tee and green sites he could find on any property. Basically he was not a ridgerunning designer. But at Seminole he managed to get some high tee and green sites with holes or quick combinations of them sort of playing down into valleys and up but he also did some ridgerunning too (#4!!--somewhat #6).

Just a brilliant Florida routing! The only hole I've never been that fond of is #9. It was probably just a "get back to the clubhouse" hole on a part of the property that had drainage problems too. I never realized until recently the significance of that berm running along the right side of #9 in the Australian pines. That was a masterful stroke for both drainage and irrigation recycling on Ross's part!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 09:45:44 AM
Rich:

You've just got to stop being such a Scottish golf snob! You're beginning to sound like some of the Dutchmen I know (and know well) that as far as I can tell feel that anything and everything we do here in American or ever have done  was thought of first in Holland!

Golf owes much allegiance to Scotland and gives it to Scotland too. But Scotland doesn't deserve every single thing in golf or its architecture either and I'm getting tired of that and if I ever get a change to design something I'm going to attempt to ditch the bunker altogether as a vestige and representation of those dunsy, sandy things that Scottish sheep used to f... in at night!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 09:56:54 AM
Tom

Thanks!  I've always been a Scottish golf snob and I'm proud of it!  You should try to get over and play there some day.  You might just learn a thing or two. ;)  You'll very much enjoy the golf, too.

In the interim, you might pick up a recently published book :  "How the Scots Invented the Modern World" by Arthur Herman.  It is so restrained (and focused on political and social theory) that it does not even include such inventions as television (John Logie Baird) and golf (which,as we all know--including your Orange friends--was invented by the Dutch!).

Cheers

Rich
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 15, 2002, 10:11:25 AM
TE
One of the reasons I chose five course designed by five different architects was to show that although there were stylistic differences that they shared certain characteristics. I'm also not too crazy about the Seminole bunkering and prefer the original Ross flashed sand, but the photo illustrates the openness and the bold architectural features that they all share. And the architects general acceptance of the natural flat profile of the site.

There seems to be two schools of thought by architects faced with a flat site, accept the flatness and simply enhance it with important architectural/strategic features - bunkers and greens. Or the opposite view, not to accept the flatness because it is thought to be uninteresting. In that case the architect's role is to create a rolling more defined and interesting site by moving dirt - creating gentling flowing ground and mounding to visually frame each hole. I actually believe the second choice is more difficult to pull off because it requires a hell of a lot of talent and money to do it well.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 10:22:27 AM
Tom MacW

Just looked at your pictures.  The only "level" site I see is Yeaman's Hall, which, perhaps coincidentally, has the most "manufactured" look to it.

What is the topic, again?

PS--not sure how "good" the Garden City photo would look without the colors of the wildflowers.  Are we still just looking at "architecture" or does ambience count now?
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 11:50:19 AM
OK, Rich, I'll give the Scots their due--much of the modern world was their idea but they have to take the good with the bad and be honest about things--or I'm not laying off them! They have to admit they invented the MacDonald's hamburger because that's already startingly obvious but they have to admit they invented the funky chicken too because I have documented evidence of it and they won't admit it!

You're damned right I would love to play golf in Scotland--are you joking? And I know I'd love it! You know how when Pat Mucci and Matt Ward sometimes say you can't tell anything about golf or its architecture from looking at photos and how I sometimes tell them they're full of sh...!? Well that's why--Scotland!!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 11:57:41 AM
In my opinion that particular Garden City photo shows just about the ultimate in a really great golf hole and also the ultimate in both minimalism and blending in with the natural lines and feeling of the site and the topography. For many of the diverse topics we discuss on here about these various things that may be the hole that has it all! Screw the wildflowers and their measly ambiance!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: THuckaby2 on February 15, 2002, 11:59:52 AM
No worries, Doyen Paul - you've seen the best golf anywhere near the UK.  The Scots need only look across the IRISH Sea to view their superiors in golf and everything else worth living for.

 ;)

TH
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 12:07:42 PM
TomH:

Now you've got my interest up! Do the Irish and the Scots hate each other? I've never really heard either way. They probably do and they probably aggressively compete about the quality of their courses, huh?

Well, at least they can agree that both have better golf than those stuck-up English people and those silly new courses they have in the woods!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Tom MacWood (Guest) on February 15, 2002, 12:12:05 PM
(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/00000159.jpg)
Garden City

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/stann4.jpg)
St.Andrews

(http://www.golfclubatlas.com/images/seminole12.jpg)
Seminole

Rich
Perhaps these are better illustrations, the middle one is an example that you gave.

The purpose of this topic is to identify the most interesting courses on level sites and what characteristics they might share. I think the color you see in the GCGC photo is the Autumn color of dying native plants. I like it, it looks very natural and enhances the feeling of integration with the environment - a common trait found with many of these level courses.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: THuckaby2 on February 15, 2002, 12:13:06 PM
My feeling is the Irish and Scots have a LOT in common, most importantly a lot of shared Celtic heritage, and the common enemy you have so perfectly defined.  So no, they don't hate each other, certainly not.  
They just like to "call" each other when one gets cheeky enough to suggest they are the best in anything.

 ;)

TH


Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Slag_Bandoon on February 15, 2002, 12:43:59 PM
 Tommy Paul, I had always assumed that you'd been to Scotland.  You are without a doubt the "Crusader" here for "truth, justice and freedom on golf playing grounds".  They don't just serve haggis, anymore.  Perhaps this years Golfapalooza should be in Scotland.  Let's say late May and early June.  Plane flights are cheap.  Passports are cheap.  The mad cows are now all dearly departed.  
 Richard, I tried to find out what "poof" meant at BBC Chewin' the Fat but the site wouldn't come up.  Please define and warn me of any other words that may find me doing the 'big sleep' in a blanket of kelp.

  Flat grounds force the imagination to illuminate.  Dynamic grounds should be envisioned with restraint.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: THuckaby2 on February 15, 2002, 12:50:13 PM
Slag:  Though due to the mention of golfapalooza I assume you are speaking to Tom Paul, just to set the record absolutely straight, this Tom (Huckaby) has been to Scotland several times.  Oh, I haven't lived there like Rich, but I've been there enough.

And my statement above stands.

Yes, I am trying to draw out Rich.  His retorts in things like this are typically the stuff of LEGEND.

 ;)

TH
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 01:04:13 PM
Huckster and Tomster and Slagster and MacWoodie

The "Scots" are descendents of the "Scotti" an Irish tribe.  There was a lot of genetic to-ing and fro-ing across the Irish Sea in those good old days.

"Poofs" were probably part of it, although they probably did not engage in the exchange of genetic mateiral, being of the "I am Spartacus!" persuasion.

The Irish really don't care that the Scots perfected golf.  They just play their own game, and it is good.  The English and the anglophile-Americans are far more full of angst on this issue.  They find it painfully hard to understand that the Celtic tribes are so much better at the creation and development of something which they so much enjoy.

MacWoodie.  Is that the New Course?  If it's the Old Course, I'll give her more credit in the future.

Cheers to all.

Rich
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: THuckaby2 on February 15, 2002, 01:08:50 PM
Rich:  I should have known better.  That is so damn logical and is of course 100% correct.  I just wanted some vitriol and yep, I should have known better than to expect you to fall for such so easily.

Damn.

Now back to your intelligent discussion.

TH


Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 01:26:07 PM
Tom IV (Tom H, Huckster, friend)

There is in my mind a thought of some sort of Golfapalooza/GCA Tour event in Scotland, this fall.  3-7 days.  In Dornoch.  In October, maybe even late October.  Playing Dornoch, Dornoch-Struie (OTM, Steel/McKenzie, Hiseman), Skibo, Brora, Golspie, Tain.   Staying at the Burghfield House Hotel.  Consuming enormous amounts of alcoholic beverages.  Singing lots of songs.  Maybe even getting some of the current archies (i.e. McKenzie, Hiseman) involved).  Maybe even Scottish golf virgins like TE Paul participating.

...a man's dreams should exceed his grasp...."

Cheers

Rich
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 01:26:52 PM
Rich:

The Americans are not full of angst on that issue, even anglophile Americans. Americans are not full of angst on much of anything with the possible exception of some very low level but subliminal concern that they might kill someone too easily and feel sort of guilty about it two weeks later.

But they're even getting better about that minor concern even with the recent realization that they can wipe out or rearrange whole countries in about fifteen minutes.

Golf and who thought up anything about it? No problem to Americans. They do things their own way in golf anyway--I'm sure you've noticed that! Those scruffy looking things they call courses in Scotland where all you do is freeze your ass off and get wet!?

Jeezus, those pitiful people who like those places are backwards, but one should not treat them too harshly since one should feel sorry for a whole race that's incapable of growing even a single tree on their best golf course!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: THuckaby2 on February 15, 2002, 01:34:55 PM
Rich:

You of all people know that such an event would mean more to me than anything I can think of... in terms of fun, coolness, education....

But you also know the realities of my life.  It ain't damn likely to be allowed by the powers that be.  I'm gonna have a hard enough time pulling off freakin' Barona, and that's a $100 flight rt, 36 hours gone total.  Scotland, gone for a week, spending some serious money no matter how cheaply I try to do it?  Not bloody likely.

But I shall continue to dream.  Thanks for the thought.

In the meantime, thanks to the Barona gig and another with a common friend of ours, my golf year won't be completely without merit.

In your honor, I say:

Slainte!

TH


Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Paul Turner on February 15, 2002, 02:04:07 PM
One of Rich's flat course choices, Deal, a fine ENGLISH links ;)

(http://publish.hometown.aol.com/pbtjab/images/deal3.jpg)

TE Paul

I'm sympathetic: my mates from Glasgow are  easily the most neurotic patriots I've ever met.  We invented this, blah, blah, blah...  

But if they claim James Watt invented the steam engine, you can tell them it's baloney (which it is)  ;)
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Slag_Bandoon on February 15, 2002, 02:08:25 PM
Tommy Paul,  Make the hemisherical leap!  (Subtle symbolism - NOT)   I mean - use the right side of your brain.  Beware of a life of contentment through rutted neural pathways dude.  Ride the cosmic sand dune.  

 "Paradise softens"   Frank Herbert  

  "Cold is not pain, rain is not battery acid, and wind is not out to get you."  Norbert Painter

  "If Scotland is half the experience of Ireland, I will have lived a full life."  NP morphing B Jones quote.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Richard_Goodale on February 15, 2002, 03:25:11 PM
Paul T

I am FLABBERGASTED that Deal has changed so much in the 21 years since I last saw her!  Fuggedabout global warming, this is Global Morphing, at the cruellest and yet on the most most beautiful  scale!

Ps--when I hear people expressing energy in Kilonewcomenhours I might be more sympathetic to your Caledoniaphobia. :)

TomP

There is a small spinney of trees on the best golf course in Scotland (and the world).  It jus does not come into play.  Listen to Slag, and ye too shall be free.

R
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 03:55:24 PM
I'm trying to listen to Slag, but he doesn't seem to come near enough to speaking Philadelphian so it's kinda hard. My brain is pretty small and I'm not sure it has a right side.
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: TEPaul on February 15, 2002, 03:58:55 PM
PaulT:

That's a very nice looking Deal hole indeed. I like those fairway contours--I call that a bit of the corrugated look!
Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Paul Turner on February 15, 2002, 04:29:05 PM
Rich

Kilonewcomenhours :D  I like it!

But I feel sorry for old Thomas; he didn't get his due

http://www.newcomen.org/tomnewcomen.htm

Back to golf.

Tom Paul

I've played Worlington and I'm pretty sure the 5th green shown is natural.  You actually play the hole from the right, as you look at the photo, and the green is shaped like vaulting horse.

Worlington does have a couple of ripples/ridges; it's not dead flat like Yeamans Hall appears to be.  And the clever part is the way the architects squeezed so much out of these modest features, using them on several holes from different angles of play (I guess like Seminole).  The course has a great set of greens too: all kinds of contour.

Title: Re: The Art of Designing on a Level Site
Post by: Slag Bandoon on February 15, 2002, 06:40:31 PM
 Sorry Tommy, It just sort of shocked me that you had never been across the pond. I had just always assumed it.  Not trying to be a heavy but thought that curiosity might have pushed you over at some time.  I'm not implying in any way that you use the wrong side of your brain, just the analytical (left) side.  You are Don Quixote and I admire your crusade and your gifted prose and observations.  BTW... Albert Einstein's brain was 1/2 pound smaller than the average man's.      
  On Rocanante!  

 NorbyNeato@aol.com