Great golf holes aren't created in an office. The true test will always be what has been left for the golfers to play and enjoy; what's put on the ground, not what's on the plan.
Construction and shaping are just natural extensions of the design process. Too often they're regarded as separate endeavours, but we figured out long ago that the best results came when we spent a lot of time in the field, working to refine the hole as it comes out of the ground. We spend countless hours pushing dirt around, refining and shaping until we feel we've achieved the best outcome.
This is a throwback to the early days of golf course design, when architects would prepare a routing and provide instructions in the field on the finer details, rather than documenting them with drawings. Today, while we can provide detailed plans, our preference is to use concepts and work to refine them in the field, always allowing for room to make adjustments. The goal should always be to make the holes better, not just replicating the plan, and we typically keep making refinements right up until the time of seeding.
Each project is unique and inevitably requires a different approach to construction. Whilst we have staff skilled in design, shaping and project management, we have also formed great relationships with many like-minded consultants and contractors who assist us from time to time to help realise our vision for the course.