The Basement Build — $10,000 Mixed Use
This is the build for golfers who'd rather have headroom than scrimp. The Square Golf Omni anchors a four-camera photometric system at sub-$2,100 with no subscription fees. Pair it with the BenQ TK700STi (true 4K with HDR) and you have visuals that hold up at movie night, too. The Carl's Place 4x4 enclosure and TrueStrike Academy mat handle real practice volume without joint fatigue. The custom RTX 4060 PC runs GSPro at 4K medium settings — the recommended baseline for serious users. GSPro's $250 one-time license is the highest-value software spend in the niche.
Room requirements
The honest minimums. If your room is smaller, jump to the configurator — it’ll suggest a different build that fits.
Minimum room
Who this is for
- — Households where 2–4 people use the room
- — Mixed-use rooms (golf + movie + occasional gaming)
- — Right and left-handed players in the same household
- — Buyers who want the full GSPro experience without going premium
- — Basement converters with 9+ ft ceiling and 14+ ft depth
Cost breakdown
Required items first, then optional add-ons. Subscriptions and consumables shown separately.
| Category | Product | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Launch monitor | Square Golf OmniSquare Golf | $1,599 |
| Hitting mat | Academy MatTrueStrike | $700 |
| Enclosure | C-Series DIY Enclosure (8x8)Carl's Place | $1,000 |
| Projector | TK700STiBenQ | $1,499 |
| Computer | Mainstream Sim PC (RTX 5060 class)Skytech / CyberPowerPC / iBUYPOWER | $1,099 |
| Software | GSProGSPro | $0 |
| Accessory | Hitting Strip + Stance Pad SetVarious | $200 |
| Accessory | Projector Ceiling MountVarious | $80 |
| Accessory | Cables & Power ManagementVarious | $120 |
| Accessory · optional | Side NettingVarious | +$250 |
| Total (required items) | $9,508 | |
Field notes
Who this build is for
The buyer here is usually a 38-year-old with a finished basement, a partner who asked early in the planning conversation whether they could also watch movies on it, and one or two kids who are starting to take golf seriously enough that left-handed compatibility matters. They play 20 to 40 rounds a year, follow the Masters and the Open, and want the room to do real work — practice when motivated, polished virtual rounds with friends on Saturdays, and a giant 4K screen for the Champions League at 3 p.m. on a Tuesday.
This build exists for that exact household. The Square Golf Omni anchors a four-camera photometric setup at sub-$2,100 with no subscription, and it reads both right and left-handed swings without repositioning — the single biggest quality-of-life upgrade in a multi-user room. The BenQ TK700STi renders true 4K HDR for course play and doubles as a legitimate movie projector. The Carl's Place 4x4 enclosure, the TrueStrike Academy mat, and a real RTX 4060 sim PC running GSPro round out a build that earns its $10K — and stays there, because GSPro is a one-time license, not a subscription.
What this build trades
We are not recommending the Foresight GC3 here. The GC3 is a better launch monitor on every measurable axis, but the upgrade is $4,000 and the recreational-leaning user will not feel it across the kind of practice they will actually do. That money buys you the difference between this build and the $15,000 dedicated room. Spend it on the room, not the launch monitor.
We chose GSPro over E6 Connect for a household reason that matters: GSPro is paid once, has 400+ user-created courses, and the active modding community keeps it relevant for years. E6 looks slightly more polished out of the box, but the annual fee compounds and the course library is smaller. The honest tradeoff: GSPro on Windows is more fiddly to configure, especially the first time. If nobody in the house is comfortable in a Windows settings menu, E6 is the better fit and we'd point you at the dedicated $15K. See our subscription costs article for the five-year math.
Common gotchas during install
- Ceiling clearance with a tall ceiling-mounted projector. The TK700STi sits a few inches lower than a flush mount because it has a real fan and exhaust. In a 9-foot basement, that brings the lens to roughly 8'8". Tall players with steep wedge takeaways occasionally clip the mount on full swings — measure with a club in hand.
- Side-netting and mishit containment. With kids and guests in rotation, mishits go places. The side-netting is non-negotiable in a multi-user room, even at 11 feet of width.
- Tower PC ventilation. The RTX 4060 build pushes real heat. In a closed basement room, leave 6 inches of clearance behind and above the case, or temperatures climb across long sessions and GSPro stutters at 4K.
- HDMI 2.1 for 4K. The cheap HDMI in the projector box is HDMI 1.4. You need 2.1 for 4K at the framerate the TK700STi renders. Swap it before you mount.
- Ambidextrous spacing. The Omni is ambidextrous, but the enclosure is 4x4. A left-handed adult and a right-handed adult both swinging full driver want closer to 11 feet of width — see room requirements for the realistic numbers.
What to upgrade first if budget grows
If you add $5,000 next year, the answer is not the launch monitor — it is the room. The next tier up is the SwingBay 9x12 enclosure (the build feels like a real club bay rather than a screen on a wall) plus the Fiberbuilt Studio Mat for tour-quality turf interaction. Together those two changes lift the build's ceiling more than a launch monitor swap would.
If you add $2,000, the smart spend is splitting it between a Foresight GC3 closeout if one shows up and a better-mounted projector cage. Reviewers consistently report that the GC3 is the build's natural ceiling — past that, you are buying showroom polish, not better golf.
Where to go from here
If anyone in the house is already practicing four times a week and chasing handicap improvement, the right build is dedicated-15k-performance — GSPro on tour-grade data is a different exercise than what this build offers. If the budget is firmer than $10K, the basement $7K cost-effective build keeps GSPro and the Omni and steps down only on the mat and projector. Otherwise, this is the most-balanced build we ship — start the configurator if you are still weighing it against the alternatives.
Why these components
Each pick has a reason. Here’s ours.
Four-camera photometric system at ~$2,050 with no subscription fees. Ambidextrous setup serves households with right and left-handed players without repositioning. Unprecedented hardware-to-price ratio.
Alternatives we considered
Genuine turf interaction with gel-backed shock absorption. Protects joints across thousands of practice reps. Worth the upgrade from a $250 mat once you're playing weekly.
Alternatives we considered
Pro-grade impact screen with proper side baffles. Quality enough to support serious projector and launch monitor pairings while keeping costs reasonable.
Alternatives we considered
True 4K with HDR makes virtual courses look genuinely impressive. 16ms input lag and accurate color also make it an excellent movie and gaming display when not playing golf.
Alternatives we considered
Runs GSPro at 4K medium settings. The recommended baseline for serious practice with quality visuals. Future-proofs the build for 3–5 years.
Alternatives we considered
$250 one-time license for the community standard. 400+ user-created courses, real practice tools, active development. Best long-term software value in the niche.
Buy from
Alternatives we considered
Stance pad surrounds the hitting mat for stable footing and a defined hitting area. Standard for any permanent build.
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Standard adjustable ceiling mount with cable management. Necessary for a permanent install.
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HDMI 2.1 cables for 4K signal, surge-protected power strip, cable raceways.
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Recommended if your room is under 14 ft wide. Critical safety element when non-golfers or children are in the household.
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Want this build tailored?
Adjust for your room and your budget.
The configurator takes the same logic that produced this build and applies it to your specific dimensions and persona. If your room is tight, expect different picks.