
Connoisseur: Meet the Architect
Course design virtuoso Tom Doak explains how to create golfing perfection.
Tom Doak is a golf course architect. He has 6 courses ranked among the top 100 in the world according to the “Top 100 Courses in the World” March 2021 list compiled by Golf Magazine. They include Pacific Dunes in Oregon, Ballyneal in Colorado, Barnbougle Dunes in Tasmania and Cape Kidnappers in New Zealand.
We had a round with Tom to all hear about his process of designing award-winning golf courses.
What are you looking for when trying to hone a course out of previously untouched wilderness for the first time?
The goal is to come up with a routing that incorporates the most interesting features of the site, and tours you around the property easily.
How has the general philosophy of course design evolved in recent decades?
When the golf and housing development boom ended after 2008, the only projects that were getting built were smaller, special, just-golf projects, which was the niche for a handful of “minimalist” designers. Minimalism is the prevailing philosophy for now, and we have trained quite a few of the guys we’re competing against for work.

With this minimalistic mindset calling for more synergy with the natural landscape, is sustainability an increasing priority?
Everyone talks about sustainability now, but really it’s up to our clients to put it into practice.
Have you noticed a change in the tastes of clients and course owners over the years?
There is less focus today on building “championship” courses for resorts and private clubs. Marketing used to demand every course be 7000 yards long, even if hardly anyone was ever going to play from there. We’ve managed to scale that back a little.
We imagine you get pretty much free reign to design as you see fit. Have you had any particularly crazy or memorable requests?
A recent client asked if we might build one of the par-three holes with a “hole-in-one” pin location where it was more likely to happen. I had never considered that… worked for Pete Dye, who would never have pandered to the golfer. Which is probably one reason I’ve never made an ace.
What course do you look back on as your proudest achievement so far?
Honestly, I’ve built a dozen courses I’d be proud to call my best one. Pacific Dunes was the first of those so it holds a special place in my heart. The Loop at Forest Dunes is also a real mind-bender. You play it clockwise one day and counter-clockwise the next, using all of the same greens, but the holes are completely different played the other way around. That might be my proudest achievement. Anybody could have built a good course at Pacific Dunes. I’m not sure anybody else would have built The Loop.
Which is the greatest clubhouse you’ve ever set foot in, and what makes it so special?
I’m not really a fan of grandiose clubhouses, so my favourite is the one at Tara Iti in New Zealand. It feels like you’re just out on the owner’s back patio, with the golf course surrounding you, and the ocean within driver distance. There isn’t a more peaceful spot in golf.
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