Golf Simulators for Far Hills Estates
Hunt country proper: barns, outbuildings, and estates with room for anything. Far Hills projects choose their building first.
First decision: which building
Far Hills properties routinely offer what the rest of the state improvises toward: multiple buildings capable of hosting golf. Bank barns with volume to spare, garages built for more vehicles than most homes own, and main-house lower levels that were specified generously. Our first working session here often just ranks the candidates, weighing climate cost, network reach, household convenience, and how the bay's noise and traffic should sit relative to daily life.
The engineering follows the choice: barn conversions get shell work, climate, and power; lower levels get finish integration; and everything gets the network treatment that keeps course software responsive across acreage. Deliveries, staging, and staff coordination are planned like the estate operations they are.

The builds Far Hills calls us about
Everything we install here
Far Hills questions, answered
What does a barn-to-bay conversion typically involve?
Shell assessment, insulation and climate, electrical capacity, floor preparation, and a network link to the main house, then the bay itself. We scope all of it in one survey and sequence trades accordingly.
How do you decide between the barn and the basement?
With you, against real criteria: conversion cost, household convenience, noise placement, and future use of each building. We present the comparison; the property's logic usually makes the call obvious.
Is Far Hills within regular service?
Firmly: it anchors our Somerset Hills loop with Bernardsville, Peapack-Gladstone, and Bedminster.
Planning a simulator in Far Hills?
Send rough dimensions and a few photos, or just call: we’ll tell you honestly what your Far Hills space can do.
