Golf Simulators for Mountainside Homes
Ranches and splits on the ridge, where the downhill side keeps the secrets. Mountainside bays start with a walk around the house.
Walk the downhill side first
Mountainside's ranches and splits ride the first Watchung ridge, and the smart survey here starts outside: the downhill side of a ridge home frequently carries a walkout lower level with clearance the front door never hints at. Where the slope helps, full bays follow; where it doesn't, this era's two-car garages give honest depth and, under raised tracks, workable height.
Ridge living also means light and weather angles worth planning: west-facing walkout glazing wants shade control for camera tracking, and delivery days want driveway logistics settled in advance. Both get handled in the survey notes, not on install morning.

The builds Mountainside calls us about
Everything we install here
Mountainside questions, answered
Why does the survey start outside in Mountainside?
Because the lot's slope predicts the lower level's ceiling better than the house's age does. Two minutes of walking the grade tells us where to measure hardest.
Can strong western light really break a simulator?
It can break the experience: glare on cameras and washed-out projection. Shades and lighting scenes fix it completely, when they're in the design from the start.
Which neighbors pair with Mountainside visits?
Westfield, Springfield, and Watchung: the ridge loop we run weekly.
Planning a simulator in Mountainside?
Send rough dimensions and a few photos, or just call: we’ll tell you honestly what your Mountainside space can do.
