In the thread about Pinehurst #4, corey miller put his finger on something that I've been wrestling with on two current projects - the redesign of the Ocean course at The National in Australia, and a new major renovation that we will start in January. [Unfortunately, I can't identify the latter just yet, due to politics.] Here's corey's point:
Was most concerned with all the time,money,effort that was used to undo Fazio and if all the new/old stuff would get in the ground.
Exactly. People always talk up the potential of major renovations, but for me they are much more difficult than a new course, because somebody previously has spent millions modifying the site, and you've got to undo all of that work to get it back to pristine.
I'm still a minimalist by heart, but it's impossible to just build a cool green and some bunkers and be done with a hole on a renovation, like we can on a new course. You've got to remove all the fill and the unnatural shaping that has been done by others, and if the course has been worked on in the modern era, that's a lot of work!
On a restoration it is simply a matter of reversing the damage and putting back what was once there. If the greens were not moved in previous renovations, then there won't be a lot of excess shaping away from the greens. But for a renovation, you've got to undo all of that AND THEN START OVER and do the right thing.
The project at The National is turning out very well: we have relocated more than half the greens and it feels like a totally different course. It also feels like a much better piece of land, now that the routing is not fighting the terrain so hard! But it was way, way more work than I anticipated because there was so much old work to erase -- which is pretty funny since the original course was described in all the promotional materials as having been very minimally constructed! I think they were fibbing.