Golf Simulators for Cedar Grove Homes
Sixties and seventies housing on First Mountain's shoulder, where the slope quietly hands some homes a better basement.
The ridge giveth ceiling height
Cedar Grove's splits and ranches climb the First Mountain ridge, and hillside construction pays a simulator dividend: downhill-side lower levels frequently carry more clearance than their street-facing halves suggest, and a walkout wall makes turf, light, and access all easier. Uphill homes flip the equation, sending us to the garage, where this era's two-car footprints usually oblige on depth.
The housing's age brings predictable mechanicals through the middle of many lower levels: ducts and beams that we map zone by zone before placing a hitting position. It's routine work with routine solutions, and it's the difference between a bay that clears your driver and one that clips it.

The builds Cedar Grove calls us about
The uphill garage answer
When the slope works against the basement, the garage steps up.
Garage buildsEverything we install here
Cedar Grove questions, answered
How do I know if my Cedar Grove home is a walkout candidate?
If your backyard sits below your front door, odds are good. The survey confirms clearance at the actual hitting position, which matters more than the average ceiling number.
Do sixties-era ducts doom a lower-level bay?
Rarely: they constrain placement rather than possibility. Occasionally rerouting one duct section buys the critical inches, and we'll price that trade honestly before you decide.
Which neighboring towns pair with Cedar Grove visits?
Verona, North Caldwell, and Little Falls: one compact loop off our regular Essex routes.
Planning a simulator in Cedar Grove?
Send rough dimensions and a few photos, or just call: we’ll tell you honestly what your Cedar Grove space can do.
