Golf Simulators for Boonton Homes
A Victorian hill town with stone foundations and stubborn charm. Boonton bays get won with creativity, not catalog specs.
Hill-town houses keep secrets
Boonton climbs its hillside in layers, and the housing follows: Victorians and foursquares on the upper streets, sturdy two-families near Main Street, and mid-century homes toward the township line. Stone foundations and vintage framing make some basements short and characterful; the same slope that complicates one house gives its neighbor a walkout lower level with height to spare. No town rewards an in-person survey more.
Where the main house resists, Boonton's detached garages, many built generously in the era of bigger cars, step up. Anchoring a cage to old masonry and framing takes know-how we've built across North Jersey's older housing stock, and leveled turf over a vintage slab makes the floor honest again.

The builds Boonton calls us about
The vintage-garage cage
Careful anchoring and floor leveling turn old garages into real bays.
Garage buildsThe short-game studio
Where full swings genuinely don't fit, a putting and wedge room that earns daily use.
Custom roomsEverything we install here
Boonton questions, answered
Can you anchor a cage safely to a stone foundation wall?
Yes, with the right hardware and honest load paths, and sometimes the better answer is a self-supporting frame that doesn't ask the masonry to work. We choose per structure, not per catalog.
My Boonton basement is short. What's the realistic fallback?
The garage first, a walkout level if your lot slopes, and a genuinely excellent short-game studio if neither fits full swings. All three beat abandoning the idea.
How fast can you get to a Boonton survey?
Days, typically. We're based next door in the Montville area, and Boonton, Boonton Township, and Mountain Lakes form one of our tightest loops.
Planning a simulator in Boonton?
Send rough dimensions and a few photos, or just call: we’ll tell you honestly what your Boonton space can do.
