Salt Lake County and the surrounding Wasatch Front are not generic HVAC territory — the climate, building stock, and code requirements vary significantly across our service area. Elevation alone changes equipment performance. Downtown Salt Lake sits at 4,226 ft, but Sandy’s east bench reaches 4,800-5,200 ft, Federal Heights and the upper Avenues reach 4,800-5,000 ft, while West Valley and Glendale sit closer to 4,100-4,200 ft. Per IFGC Section 304.1, gas equipment requires 4% capacity derate per 1,000 ft above sea level — meaning equipment in Sandy’s east bench needs roughly 19-21% capacity derate vs. only 15-16% derate downtown. Building stock varies dramatically by neighborhood. The Avenues has predominantly pre-1930 construction with original boilers and cast iron radiators; West Valley has predominantly 1970s-1990s ranch and split-level construction with forced-air systems; Sandy has predominantly 1980s-2010s suburban construction with mixed equipment generations. Code requirements vary by AHJ. Salt Lake City Building Services has specific historic preservation considerations for the Avenues, Capitol Hill, and Federal Heights. Murray and West Valley City have local amendments to standard IRC/IMC provisions. Each city’s specific HVAC service patterns reflect these underlying factors. Below is our service area summary; click through to dedicated city pages for neighborhood-specific HVAC service context. For technical service detail see the services hub.
Same-day capability across most of our service area. Spanish-language service available. Comfort Care and Premium Care plans available in all primary service areas.