I doubt Sand Valley's Lido will open a Pandora's box resulting in an abundance of recreated NLE courses of old. I also doubt that the Lido will be the last.
Should an example from the Victorian era of design be resurrected? Which course(s) would serve as the most representative example?
I think it'd be interesting for the golf community to be able to experience a sampling of what came before the Golden Age. In a way, golf course design is a participatory form of living history. I for one would like to see and play shots similar to what someone might've had in the 19th century.
Par 3 courses have grown popular on properties wanting to add extra, non-regulation holes of golf. Opting instead for a sub 5,000 yard Victorian layout could be an interesting pivot that could pull the dates back, so to speak, for the kind of golf architecture to which we currently have access.
I'd particularly like to know, from those more historically aware, which courses might make the most sense.