Golf Simulators Across Union County
Westfield and Summit anchored our Union County work; the ridge towns and river towns around them complete it.
Ridge, river, and rail
Union County's simulator geography reads like its commuter map. The Raritan Valley line strings together the county's golf-serious family towns, Westfield, Cranford, Fanwood, Scotch Plains' station side, where colonials and splits from every postwar decade produce the basement-versus-garage contests we referee weekly. Summit and New Providence anchor the county's northwest with Midtown Direct schedules that make the ten-minute home practice session the only kind that reliably happens.
The Watchung ridge adds terrain to the story. Mountainside, Springfield's upper streets, and Berkeley Heights against the reservation all benefit from slope: downhill-facing walkout lower levels with clearance their front doors never advertise. Our ridge-town surveys start outside, reading the grade before the rooms, because in these towns the lot predicts the ceiling better than the architecture does.
Springfield deserves its golf-history nod, championship golf lives inside the township's borders, and the county's club and public-course culture keeps winter demand honest everywhere. Cranford adds the county's water lesson: the Rahway River's history routes low-street projects to garages and upper rooms, a discipline we apply with the same evidence-first process as everywhere water writes rules.
From starter cage builds in Clark to the estate section of Scotch Plains, Union County spans our full tier range, and every project starts identically: a free survey, a swing test where it matters, and an itemized quote. The town guides below, alongside the established Westfield and Summit pages, carry the local detail.

Union County towns we cover
- Summit
- Westfield
- New Providence
- Berkeley Heights
- Mountainside
- Springfield
- Cranford
- Scotch Plains & Fanwood
- Clark
Start with the installation overview, cost guide, and room requirements.
Everything we install here
Union County questions, answered
Which Union County rooms win most often?
Ridge-town walkouts and the county's solid two-car garages, with newer lower levels in Warren-adjacent corners close behind. Prewar sections near the stations lean on compact camera builds.
Does Cranford's flood history end basement projects there?
On low streets, usually yes for below-grade builds, and we say so plainly. Garages, first floors, and net-based setups keep those projects alive and dry.
How established is your Union County presence?
Westfield and Summit were among our first town guides, and the corridor between them schedules weekly. The expansion towns join existing loops rather than new ones.
What should a Union County family budget for a first build?
Most start in the cage or cage-plus-projection tiers; the cost guide maps the ranges and your survey pins the number. Finished-room upgrades bolt on later without waste when phase one is measured right.
Planning a simulator in Union County?
Tell us the town and the room, and we’ll tell you what Union County housing stock usually allows: honestly, before you spend anything.
