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The Uneekor Showroom — $40,000

A premium build that takes the Uneekor ecosystem seriously. The EYE XO2 mounts overhead for ambidextrous full-time use; the Foresight GC3 sits on the floor for lessons, fittings, or anyone who prefers a side-mount feel. SIGPRO Commercial 9x14 is the screen used in commercial bays. The BenQ LK936ST 4K laser projector eliminates lamp replacements for the practical life of the room. SurfThing SG3 is the turnkey premium sim PC — assembled, tested, warrantied. Three software ecosystems (GSPro, E6 Connect, FSX Play) cover every play mode and visitor preference.

$30,496
Total
$40K
Target
$1049/yr
Ongoing
dedicated room
Space

Room requirements

The honest minimums. If your room is smaller, jump to the configurator — it’ll suggest a different build that fits.

Minimum room

18′
Length
14′
Width
10′
Ceiling

Who this is for

  • Buyers building a permanent entertainment and practice room
  • Owners who want both overhead and floor launch monitors for flexibility
  • Anyone hosting lessons, fittings, or guests at the room
  • Premium buyers who prefer turnkey hardware over DIY

Cost breakdown

Required items first, then optional add-ons. Subscriptions and consumables shown separately.

CategoryProductPrice
Launch monitor
EYE XO2Uneekor
$10,999
Launch monitor
GC3Foresight Sports
$6,999
Hitting mat
Studio MatFiberbuilt
$1,300
Enclosure
SIGPRO Commercial Enclosure (9x14)Shop Indoor Golf
$3,550
Projector
LK936STBenQ
$3,499
Computer
SurfThing SG3-5702SurfThing
$2,999
Software
GSProGSPro
$0
Software
E6 ConnectTruGolf
$0
Software
Foresight FSX PlayForesight Sports
$0
Accessory
Hitting Strip + Stance Pad SetVarious
$200
Accessory
Projector Ceiling CageVarious
$325
Accessory
Cables & Power ManagementVarious
$120
Accessory
Marked Simulator Balls (RPT / FSPro)Various
$50
Accessory
Launch Monitor Protective CaseVarious
$150
Accessory
Interlocking Foam Floor TilesVarious
$250
Accessory
Ball TrayVarious
$40
Accessory
Simulator TeesVarious
$15
Total (required items)$30,496
Annual ongoing (subscriptions)+$1,049/yr

Field notes

Who this build is for

This is the build for the buyer who's done the $30K mental math and decided two launch monitors makes the room work harder. Typically a 50+ owner finishing a custom basement or a purpose-built outbuilding studio, with a household that includes both right- and left-handed players, or with visitors regularly cycling through. The installer is already engaged, the framing plan is already drawn, and the parts list is being chosen against a ten-year horizon rather than a three-year one.

The owner at this tier has often demoed at a commercial bay and decided the commercial-bay feel — overhead launch monitor, commercial enclosure, turnkey PC — is what the home build should reproduce. They aren't chasing tour-grade accuracy on the primary unit. They want flexibility, durability, and the kind of finish that doesn't reveal compromises when guests examine the room closely.

What this build trades, plainly

The headline question at this tier is why two launch monitors. The honest answer is that overhead and floor units do different jobs, and a permanent showroom is the build where running both becomes practical. The Uneekor EYE XO2 mounts overhead and stays there — ambidextrous out of the box, no equipment moves between users, no recalibration when the right-handed owner finishes and his left-handed daughter steps in. For casual rounds and quick sessions, the overhead is the unit that gets used.

The Foresight GC3 sits on the floor for the work the overhead doesn't handle as cleanly: lessons with a visiting pro, club fittings, anyone running a side-mount workflow, and any session where the player wants to see the launch monitor's display directly. FSX Play, the GC3's native ecosystem, exports shot data in the format teaching pros are most likely to already use. Two ecosystems on a single mat sounds redundant until the room has been used for six months — at that point the buyer who skipped the second unit usually starts pricing it.

This build comes in at roughly $30,500 against a $40K target, which means there's headroom for the room itself: acoustic treatment, integrated audio, lighting, finishes. That's the right way to use the slack. A $40K total budget with $30K of equipment and $10K of room build outperforms a $40K total budget with $40K of equipment in a partially-finished room every time.

The SIGPRO Commercial enclosure is the meaningful upgrade over the SIG12 in the $30K tier. Steel frame, commercial-grade impact screen rated for many more shot cycles, and the visual finish that reads as "commercial bay imported into a home" rather than "home enclosure on the higher end." If the room is intended to last a decade with heavy use, this is the enclosure that earns the spend.

Aesthetic and install considerations

Overhead launch monitor placement is the first detail that separates a clean install from a visible one. The Uneekor EYE XO2 mounts to a ceiling structure that has to be located precisely above the ball position — not approximately. Get this wrong by six inches and either the unit doesn't track properly or the projector cage interferes. Frame the structural blocking before drywall, run the power and network drops in the same chase, and hand the installer a sketch with measured dimensions.

Cable management on a dual-launch-monitor build is genuinely more involved than on a single-LM room. Two USB or network runs to the PC, two power runs, plus the projector and audio. A dedicated cable raceway running from a finished closet behind the room — where the PC, network gear, and AV receiver live — into the studio is the install pattern that holds up. Service the equipment from the closet side; the studio side stays clean.

Acoustic treatment matters more here than in the $30K build because the room is built for longer sessions. Panels behind the screen, on the side walls, and on the ceiling between the projector and the hitting position. Integrated in-ceiling audio is non-negotiable at this tier — the projector speaker is acceptable on a budget build, but in a $40K showroom it reads as a missing detail. Lighting on Lutron or Hue with scene presets, HVAC sized for the sim PC's heat output under load. None of this is optional at this price.

What's not here, and why

The Trackman iO at $14K is the obvious omission. It's a strong overhead unit and some installers default to it, but the EYE XO2 plus GC3 pairing in this build is more capable for less money — overhead and floor coverage in one set, no subscription gating on either. The Foresight Falcon is the other premium overhead option, and at $14K it sits in the same conversation as the iO. Either deserves a look if the buyer specifically prefers a single-vendor stack, but the dual-LM Uneekor and Foresight pairing here is the more flexible answer for most showrooms at this budget.

If $40K becomes $50K, the GCQuad showroom build is the next tier — money-no-object, GCQuad as primary, and the LG ProBeam projector. If you're still deciding between this build and the $30K tier, the showroom persona page walks through the criteria.

Why these components

Each pick has a reason. Here’s ours.

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.