Heating & Cooling
Get your cooling system installed, diagnosed, and repaired quickly and efficiently.
Cooling: Stay comfortable with a system that uses an indoor evaporator coil and an outdoor condenser coil to transfer heat. A compressor circulates refrigerant through copper tubing and aluminum fins, absorbing heat from inside your home and releasing it outside—keeping your indoor air cool.
Heating: A furnace pulls in cool air, heats it, and distributes the warm air throughout your home via ductwork, ensuring consistent comfort.
Package Unit
This system combines both heating and cooling functions in a single, compact unit—typically installed outdoors. It’s an ideal solution for homes or businesses with limited indoor space and can be placed on a rooftop, in a crawl space, or at ground level for flexible installation.
Heat Pump
A heat pump functions like an air conditioner in reverse, using refrigerant to efficiently heat your home. It draws warmth from the air or ground, causing the refrigerant to evaporate into a gas. This gas is compressed, raising its temperature, then passed through a heat exchanger to transfer warmth into your home or a central heating system. As the gas cools, it returns to a liquid, and the cycle repeats until the desired temperature is reached.
Heat pumps are energy-efficient and environmentally friendly, using less energy than they produce in heat, making them a key solution for reducing carbon emissions and combating climate change.
Dual Fuel System
A hybrid heating and cooling system combines an electric heat pump with a gas furnace, automatically switching between the two based on outdoor temperatures and thermostat settings. This allows the heat pump to handle milder weather efficiently, while the gas furnace provides reliable heat in colder conditions. The result is optimized comfort, reduced energy use, and long-term cost savings on utility bills.
Mini-Split
A ductless heating and cooling system operates without traditional ductwork, using an outdoor compressor connected to one or more indoor air-handling units via a conduit. The indoor units, typically wall-mounted, cool or heat individual rooms rather than the entire home.
These systems offer zone-specific temperature control, allowing you to condition only the spaces in use—saving energy and lowering utility costs. They’re quiet, easy to install, and ideal for homes without ductwork, renovations, or add-on spaces.
Air Handler
An air handler unit (AHU), also known as a fan coil, is a key part of an HVAC system that circulates conditioned air throughout your home. Typically installed indoors and connected to ductwork, it works with components like the furnace, air conditioner, or heat pump to filter, heat, cool, and distribute air.
The AHU includes a fan with adjustable speeds for airflow control, a heating element, cooling coil, and a drain pan to manage condensation during cooling.
Ductwork
Ductwork is a system of tubes, typically located in the attic, basement, or crawl space, that distributes heated or cooled air throughout your home. Connected to vents in each room, ducts are essential for efficient HVAC system performance.
Properly sized ductwork ensures better airflow, consistent temperatures, lower energy costs, and reduced noise. It also improves indoor air quality by directing pollen and dust to filters rather than circulating them through your home.
Zone Control System
A zoned HVAC system divides a home into separate areas, each with its own thermostat and dampers to control temperature and airflow independently. This enhances comfort and reduces energy use by only conditioning the spaces in use.
Zoned systems can be either ducted or ductless. Ducted systems use existing ductwork, while ductless systems (mini-splits) use wall- or ceiling-mounted air handlers. Most standard systems support up to four zones, while mini-splits can handle up to eight, making zoning a flexible solution for nearly any home.
Air Quality Solutions
Enhance your indoor air quality with our advanced air filtration and purification systems—designed to help you breathe cleaner, healthier air in your home.
Water Heater
A water heater is a plumbing appliance designed to heat water for residential or commercial use. It typically stores and maintains hot water in a tank, supplying it to fixtures and appliances such as showers, sinks, dishwashers, and laundry machines.
Water heaters are built for functionality and durability.
Water Heater Tankless
Tired of running out of hot water? A tankless water heater may be the solution. These compact, energy-efficient units heat water on demand using gas burners or electric coils, providing a near-endless supply of hot water in minutes.
Tankless systems save space, reduce energy costs, and offer long-term value—lasting up to 25 years compared to 8–12 years for traditional models.
Blow-In Insulation
The process of blow-in insulation materials such as cellulose, fiberglass or mineral wool into attics, walls, and other spaces using a machine. This process can reach areas that batts cannot and can create thermal and noise barriers. It can serve as an alternative to removing drywall. Blow-in insulation is cost- effective, efficient in filling gaps, it can help condensation and repel insects and rodents and it can be eco-friendly.