Golf Simulators for South Orange Homes
Victorian scale cuts both ways: grand rooms upstairs, gaslight-era basements below. South Orange surveys find the exceptions.
Victorian scale, measured honestly
South Orange's Victorians and prewar colonials were built at a scale that occasionally gifts a simulator project something unexpected: a basement dug deeper than its era's habit, a carriage house with genuine volume, or a third floor under a steep roof with ridge height to spare. The base rate stays modest, gaslight-era foundations mostly measure short, but the exception rate here rewards a thorough survey more than most towns.
Where exceptions don't materialize, the standard compact playbook delivers: camera-based accuracy, offset geometry, garage builds, and short-game studios that turn scoring practice into a nightly habit. Maplewood and West Orange adjoin on the same dense loop.

The builds South Orange calls us about
Everything we install here
South Orange questions, answered
What makes a carriage house viable for golf?
Volume first, then shell condition: insulation, power, and a network link back to the house. South Orange's surviving carriage houses often pass the volume test easily, and we scope the rest in one visit.
Are tall Victorian basements common enough to hope for?
Common enough to check for, not to bank on: some builders here dug generously. It costs nothing to find out, and the answer changes everything.
Which loop serves South Orange?
The Maplewood-West Orange-Millburn circuit: core Essex territory for us.
Planning a simulator in South Orange?
Send rough dimensions and a few photos, or just call: we’ll tell you honestly what your South Orange space can do.
