9th and 9th HVAC Service Salt Lake City | Boutique SLC

HVAC Service for 9th and 9th, Salt Lake City: Boutique District and Bungalow Specialists

In April 2025, the owner of a boutique gift shop in the 9th and 9th commercial district contacted us about an aging rooftop unit serving her shop. The 1923 commercial-residential mixed-use building on 900 South had received various HVAC modifications over the years; the second-floor residential apartment had been served by a separate gas furnace replaced in 2018, but the ground-floor commercial space had retained its 1996 Lennox 3-ton rooftop unit (29 years service age) that was producing inconsistent cooling and audible compressor strain. Marcus Halverson evaluated the property and identified an interesting challenge: replacement of the rooftop unit required coordination with both the shop owner (downstairs commercial tenant) and the residential tenant upstairs (concerned about work noise during installation). Solution: project scheduled for a Tuesday-Wednesday in late April when shop traffic typically lighter and residential tenant working from home was able to relocate temporarily. Replacement: Carrier 50TC*A07 Performance series 6-ton rooftop unit (larger than original to accommodate evolved cooling demand from commercial space additions of computer equipment, lighting, and refrigeration display cases over 29 years). Marcus + Eli Tran completed 2-day installation including Wasatch Front Crane Service crane operation for unit removal and replacement, new electrical service connections, refrigerant lineset modifications, control system upgrades. Total cost $18,400 installed; net cost reduced by Federal IRA 25C credit application for commercial property (consult tax professional). Shop reopened Thursday morning with significantly improved cooling capacity and reliability. 9th and 9th’s combination of historic mixed-use commercial properties, eclectic neighborhood character, and active boutique commercial district creates distinctive HVAC service patterns we specialize in.

Why 9th and 9th Requires Specialized HVAC Service

Neighborhood characteristics:
9th and 9th refers to the small commercial and residential district centered on the intersection of 900 South and 900 East in Salt Lake City. The commercial district spans approximately 900 South between 800 East and 1100 East, plus 900 East between 800 South and 1000 South. Surrounding residential streets form the residential portion of the 9th and 9th neighborhood. Approximately 800 residential properties plus 50-60 commercial properties primarily concentrated along 900 South. Active neighborhood with strong sense of community identity; one of Salt Lake City’s most distinctive boutique commercial districts featuring locally-owned businesses, restaurants, bookstores, and specialty retail.
Housing stock distribution:
  • 1900s-1910s: 22% of housing stock (Craftsman bungalows, early Foursquares; oldest 9th and 9th residential development)
  • 1910s-1930s: 38% of housing stock (heart of 9th and 9th development; bungalows, Tudor Revival, Colonial Revival)
  • 1930s-1950s: 18% of housing stock (Cape Cod, smaller Tudor, ranch styles emerging)
  • 1950s-1980s: 14% of housing stock (post-war infill, occasional small apartment buildings)
  • 1980s-present: 8% of housing stock (recent infill, condo developments, mixed-use redevelopment)
Commercial district characteristics:
The 9th and 9th commercial district features predominantly 1910s-1940s commercial buildings, many with original residential apartments above ground-floor retail (typical Main Street commercial pattern of early-20th-century neighborhoods). Building characteristics: 1-2 story heights, brick masonry construction, ground-floor retail with apartment(s) above, varied HVAC retrofit history reflecting decades of equipment replacements. Approximately 50-60 commercial spaces across the district housing restaurants (15+ establishments), specialty retail (12+ shops), professional services, fitness studios, art galleries.
Elevation considerations:
9th and 9th sits at moderate Salt Lake City elevation, approximately 4,290-4,350 ft. Altitude derate per IFGC 304.1 ranges 17.2-17.4%. Relatively flat topography across the neighborhood.
Property characteristics:
9th and 9th residential properties feature: small to moderate lots (0.10-0.20 acre typical), variable architectural character (predominantly 1910s-1930s bungalow and Period Revival), moderate home sizes (typically 1,200-2,400 sq ft), moderate property values, active renovation market with engaged homeowners, walkable access to commercial district amenities. Commercial properties feature: small footprints typically 1,200-3,000 sq ft per commercial unit, mixed-use configurations common (ground-floor retail + upstairs residential), historic preservation considerations for some properties, active commercial tenant turnover requiring HVAC service flexibility.
Customer demographics:
9th and 9th residents include: young professionals and families attracted by walkable amenities, established homeowners (10-20+ year residence patterns), university-affiliated residents (proximity to U of U), small business owners (residential proximity to commercial district), creative class professionals (artists, designers, writers). Engaged with neighborhood council and commercial district association. Demographic profile values local businesses, walkable neighborhoods, sustainability, design-quality aesthetics.
Equipment patterns:
  • Residential forced-air heating: Approximately 76% of 9th and 9th homes use forced-air systems with high-efficiency furnaces.
  • Hydronic heating: Approximately 8% retain hydronic systems.
  • Heat pump systems: Approximately 6% use heat pumps.
  • Modern mixed-use building systems: Approximately 5% with complex HVAC reflecting commercial use.
  • Other configurations: Approximately 5%.
  • Central air conditioning: Approximately 80% have central AC.
  • Ductless mini-splits: Approximately 15% (commonly in older homes lacking traditional AC infrastructure).

Common 9th and 9th Service Scenarios

900 South Boutique RTU Replacement (April 2025)

The opening scenario represents 9th and 9th’s commercial service market. The 1923 mixed-use building pattern (commercial ground-floor + residential upstairs) creates distinctive service patterns: separate HVAC systems per use, coordination between commercial tenant and residential tenant, work scheduling around commercial business hours, crane equipment requirements for rooftop unit work. Wasatch Front Crane Service partnership essential for our commercial RTU work; their crane positioning expertise supports efficient rooftop unit replacements. Carrier 50TC Performance series mid-tier commercial RTU equipment serves these mixed-use buildings reliably.

9th and 9th Bungalow First-Time AC Installation (June 2024)

Recent project: 1924 Craftsman bungalow near 1100 East and 1000 South, first-time central AC installation. Existing 2014 Bryant 925SA furnace with variable-speed ECM blower compatible for cooling integration. Bryant 24ACA336A003 2-ton 14 SEER2 outdoor unit + Bryant CNPVP3024 evaporator coil + Honeywell T6 Pro smart thermostat + new 30-amp 240V electrical circuit + 26-ft insulated refrigerant lineset routed through basement utility area + condensate drainage to basement floor drain. $11,800 installed; $10,200 net after $400 Wattsmart + $1,200 IRA 25C. Customer (architect) prioritized aesthetics: outdoor unit placed in concealed rear yard, electrical conduit painted to match brick masonry, condensate drain line concealed within basement. Architectural attention to detail matched 9th and 9th customer expectations effectively.

9th and 9th Restaurant Equipment Service

The 9th and 9th commercial district includes 15+ restaurants with substantial commercial HVAC requirements: kitchen exhaust ventilation, makeup air systems, dining room cooling and heating, ventilation balancing for combustion appliances and exhaust hoods. Recent project: locally-owned bistro on 900 South, ongoing service relationship since 2019 covering: kitchen exhaust hood maintenance, restaurant HVAC tune-ups twice annually (spring and fall), restaurant equipment service coordination, after-hours service for restaurant emergency situations. Annual maintenance contract $1,400 covering: quarterly HVAC inspections + 4 filter changes + makeup air system service + kitchen hood ductwork cleaning. Restaurant service requires understanding commercial kitchen ventilation patterns, NFPA 96 commercial kitchen ventilation code, balanced HVAC operation supporting both customer comfort and kitchen ventilation requirements.

9th and 9th Mixed-Use Building Comprehensive Service

Recent project: 1918 mixed-use building on 900 South, comprehensive HVAC service across building. Property includes: ground-floor specialty retail shop (separate Carrier RTU), 2nd floor 2-bedroom apartment (separate gas furnace + AC), 3rd floor 1-bedroom apartment (separate ductless mini-split system). Building owner contracted for annual maintenance covering all three HVAC systems: $1,800 annual contract = $600 per HVAC system covering bi-annual tune-ups + priority emergency dispatch + 15% repair discount. Mixed-use building economics support this approach: owner manages three separate HVAC systems across single building, single contractor relationship simplifies coordination, predictable annual cost across complex property.

9th and 9th Architect-Designed Custom HVAC Project

9th and 9th’s customer base includes architects and design professionals frequently designing custom homes or major renovations with comprehensive HVAC requirements. Recent project: 2024 substantial renovation of 1928 bungalow on Mclelland Street (Liberty Wells boundary). Architect-designed project including: Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat ductless multi-zone system serving expanded floor plan (4-zone configuration), comprehensive whole-home humidification (AprilAire 700), comprehensive IAQ (Aprilaire 5000 electronic air cleaner), smart home integration (ecobee Premium thermostat + Apple HomeKit integration), Aeroseal duct sealing throughout. $26,800 HVAC scope within larger renovation project. Architect coordination essential for proper HVAC integration with renovation design intent.

9th and 9th Commercial Considerations

Mixed-use building HVAC complexity:
9th and 9th’s mixed-use building stock creates distinctive HVAC patterns: separate systems serving commercial vs. residential use, different operating schedules (commercial weekdays + weekends; residential continuous), different temperature requirements, different ventilation requirements (commercial spaces with public occupancy have higher ventilation requirements per ASHRAE 62.1), shared mechanical infrastructure in some buildings. Service work in mixed-use buildings requires understanding both commercial and residential service patterns.
Restaurant kitchen ventilation specialty:
9th and 9th’s restaurant concentration creates significant kitchen ventilation service market. Kitchen ventilation involves: exhaust hood operation (Type I hoods for cooking with smoke and grease vapors; NFPA 96 compliance), makeup air system providing replacement air for exhaust, fire suppression systems (Ansul system or equivalent), ductwork cleaning (typically every 3-6 months depending on cooking volume), grease trap and grease management coordination with restaurant operations. Restaurant HVAC service requires specialized knowledge beyond typical residential or office HVAC; coordination with restaurant operations essential for service scheduling.
Commercial tenant turnover service patterns:
Active commercial tenant turnover in 9th and 9th creates service opportunities: between-tenant HVAC inspections (verifying system condition for new tenant), system modifications supporting new tenant requirements (food service tenant may require ventilation upgrades different from previous retail tenant), equipment lifecycle planning for property owners across tenant transitions. Property owners with multiple commercial tenants benefit from contractor relationships understanding their property’s HVAC patterns across tenant changes.
Boutique retail tenant operational considerations:
9th and 9th’s specialty retail tenants have distinctive operational patterns: limited tolerance for HVAC failures (immediate loss of customer comfort affects retail business), preference for after-hours service to avoid customer disruption, often-cherished tenant-landlord relationships requiring coordination diplomacy, small business operational sensitivity (HVAC failure during peak shopping seasons especially costly). Service approach for boutique retail tenants: clear scheduling, prompt response, transparent pricing, attention to customer experience during work.

Service Response Times for 9th and 9th

Standard service response:
20-35 minutes from our South Salt Lake office to 9th and 9th during business hours. Office proximity provides among the fastest response times within our Salt Lake City service area.
Emergency response:
45-80 minutes for after-hours emergency dispatch typically. Minimal seasonal variation due to good street access. Comfort Care plan members receive priority dispatch reducing response time approximately 25-35%.
Project access considerations:
Variable by property type. Residential homes: standard residential access. Mixed-use buildings: tenant coordination, sometimes shared mechanical rooms, parking on commercial street can be challenging during business hours. Commercial properties: rooftop work may require crane equipment ($385-685 added cost). Pre-project access evaluation included in consultations.

Q2 2026 Pricing Reference (Subject to Quarterly Review)

Common 9th and 9th service pricing:
  • Residential furnace annual tune-up: $245 (Comfort Care plan), $345 (non-member)
  • Commercial HVAC tune-up: $385-485 per RTU (variable by equipment complexity)
  • Residential furnace replacement (mid-tier 96% AFUE): $7,400-11,400 installed
  • Residential furnace replacement (premium tier 97-98% AFUE): $11,400-15,400 installed
  • Residential central AC installation: $7,400-12,400 installed
  • Commercial RTU replacement (mid-tier 6-ton): $16,400-22,400 installed including crane
  • Commercial RTU replacement (premium tier 6-ton): $22,400-32,400 installed including crane
  • Restaurant kitchen ventilation maintenance: $185-385 per visit depending on scope
  • Restaurant annual HVAC contract: $1,200-2,800 annual depending on equipment count
  • Mixed-use building HVAC service: Pricing reflects multiple system count
  • Custom architect-designed HVAC integration: Variable; typical $18,000-32,000 for comprehensive systems
  • Crane service for rooftop work: $385-685 added cost (Wasatch Front Crane Service)

9th and 9th-specific pricing factors: typically comparable to SLC standard rates; commercial work pricing reflects commercial equipment requirements.

Service call pricing:
  • Standard residential diagnostic visit: $109 weekday daytime
  • Standard commercial diagnostic visit: $159 weekday daytime
  • After-hours/weekend diagnostic: $169 dispatch fee residential, $245 commercial
  • Comfort Care plan members: dispatch fee waived; 15% repair discount; priority response

Documented 9th and 9th Customer Patterns

900 South boutique gift shop owner (RTU replacement April 2025):
Commercial property owner relationship since 2019 covering ongoing commercial HVAC service. Recent RTU replacement project demonstrated coordination capability for mixed-use building service. Property includes ground-floor commercial + upstairs residential apartment under separate HVAC systems; owner manages both through coordinated service approach. Ongoing annual maintenance contract supporting both commercial RTU and residential apartment HVAC.
Locally-owned restaurant (kitchen ventilation since 2019):
6-year service relationship covering: kitchen exhaust hood maintenance, twice-annual HVAC tune-ups, after-hours emergency service, kitchen ductwork cleaning (every 6 months). Restaurant owner has referred multiple 9th and 9th business owners to our services; restaurant industry social network drives commercial service growth in district. $1,400 annual maintenance contract.
Mixed-use building owner (3-system property):
1918 mixed-use building (ground-floor retail + 2nd floor 2BR apartment + 3rd floor 1BR apartment with ductless mini-split). $1,800 annual contract covering all three HVAC systems. Building owner reports significant value from single contractor relationship for complex property; equipment lifecycle planning across building supports capital budgeting.
9th and 9th architect customer (substantial renovation project 2024):
Practicing architect implementing major bungalow renovation. Comprehensive HVAC system integration including Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat ductless multi-zone + comprehensive IAQ + Aeroseal duct sealing + smart home integration. Architect-coordinated approach values: detailed technical communication, design integration considerations, premium equipment selection appropriate for design intent. Customer subsequently referred clients (architect’s other clients renovating 9th and 9th properties) to our services.

Why Customers Choose Us for 9th and 9th Service

Commercial and residential combined capability:
9th and 9th’s mixed-use building stock and commercial district concentration require contractor capability for both commercial and residential service. Many HVAC contractors specialize in only residential or only commercial work; our combined capability serves 9th and 9th’s mixed property types effectively.
Restaurant kitchen ventilation expertise:
9th and 9th’s restaurant concentration requires specialized kitchen ventilation expertise: NFPA 96 commercial kitchen ventilation code, exhaust hood operation and cleaning, makeup air system service, fire suppression coordination. We’ve serviced 9+ 9th and 9th restaurants since 2019; specialty experience matches district’s restaurant market.
Mixed-use building coordination:
Mixed-use buildings require contractor capability for both commercial and residential tenant coordination, complex building infrastructure understanding, capital planning across building systems. Our experience with 9th and 9th mixed-use buildings (12+ such properties under service) provides specialized capability.
Architect and design professional partnerships:
9th and 9th’s architect and design professional customer base requires contractor capability for: detailed technical communication, design integration considerations, premium equipment selection, comprehensive system planning, post-installation documentation supporting architect’s project records. We work effectively with this customer demographic.
Office proximity advantage:
Our South Salt Lake office (within 10-15 minutes of 9th and 9th) provides fastest response times for the district. Quick response time particularly valuable for commercial customers where HVAC failures directly affect business operations.

Frequently Asked Questions

I own a mixed-use building in 9th and 9th — how should I structure HVAC service?
Mixed-use buildings typically benefit from single contractor relationship covering all building HVAC systems. Recommended approach: comprehensive annual maintenance contract covering ground-floor commercial RTU + upstairs residential equipment + any other building HVAC. Single contractor relationship benefits: predictable annual cost across all building systems, coordinated equipment lifecycle planning, priority emergency dispatch for both commercial and residential tenant comfort issues, simplified administrative coordination, contractor familiarity with building patterns. Pricing varies by equipment count and complexity; typical 2-3 system mixed-use building contract $1,400-2,400 annual. Major equipment replacement projects priced separately. Tenant coordination supported through standard service procedures.
What’s the typical commercial RTU replacement cost in 9th and 9th?
Variable by equipment size, capacity, complexity:

  • 3-4 ton commercial RTU (smaller commercial spaces): $12,400-18,400 installed including crane service
  • 5-6 ton commercial RTU (medium commercial spaces): $16,400-22,400 installed including crane
  • 7-10 ton commercial RTU (larger commercial spaces): $22,400-32,400 installed including crane
  • Premium tier commercial RTU (Carrier WeatherMaster premium): +$3,000-6,000 over standard tier
  • Crane service cost component: $385-685 typically included in RTU replacement pricing

Federal IRA 25C may apply to commercial RTU replacement when meeting efficiency thresholds; consult tax professional for specific commercial property application. Section 179 immediate expense election may apply for qualifying commercial HVAC equipment. Property tax implications vary; consult tax professional. Rebates from Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart available for qualifying commercial equipment ($400-1,200 typical for commercial RTU). Specific cost requires property assessment.

How do I coordinate HVAC service in my 9th and 9th restaurant during business hours?
Restaurant HVAC service requires careful coordination. Standard approach:

  • Routine maintenance (filter changes, tune-ups): Schedule during slow periods (typically Monday-Tuesday morning before lunch service, or late afternoon between lunch and dinner)
  • Major repairs: Schedule outside business hours when possible (early morning before opening, late evening after closing); after-hours rates apply
  • Equipment replacement: Schedule during restaurant closing days (typical 1-2 day closures for major HVAC work)
  • Kitchen ventilation cleaning: Schedule overnight or during closure days (typically every 3-6 months)
  • Emergency service: Available 24/7; restaurant emergency rates apply

We provide flexibility for restaurant scheduling priorities. Long-term restaurant relationships develop including familiarity with restaurant’s operating patterns and seasonal scheduling needs. Annual maintenance contracts include after-hours service capability supporting flexible scheduling.

What HVAC considerations apply to renovating my 9th and 9th bungalow?
9th and 9th bungalow renovations typically include several HVAC considerations:

  • Existing equipment evaluation: Assess current equipment condition and remaining service life
  • Renovation HVAC integration timing: Coordinate HVAC work with renovation schedule for cost and disruption efficiency
  • Ductwork capacity: Original 1920s-1930s ductwork may require expansion to serve renovated layout
  • Electrical service capacity: Major renovations often include electrical service evaluation; HVAC equipment additions may require panel upgrades
  • IAQ system addition: Renovation provides ideal timing for whole-home IAQ system installation
  • Zoning considerations: Finished attic additions or master suite additions often warrant zoning system retrofit
  • Original chimney handling: Older bungalows often have chimneys requiring decisions during HVAC modernization (preserve as architectural feature vs. modify for new venting)
  • Smart home integration: Renovation timing supports smart thermostat and home automation integration

Pre-renovation HVAC consultation identifies opportunities for integrated planning. We coordinate with general contractors for proper sequencing of HVAC work within renovation timeline.

Why are commercial HVAC service rates higher than residential?
Commercial HVAC service rates reflect several factors:

  • Equipment complexity: Commercial RTUs typically larger and more complex than residential equipment
  • Safety requirements: Rooftop work requires fall protection equipment and procedures, often 2-technician crews
  • Specialized equipment: Commercial work often requires crane equipment, specialized tools, larger refrigerant handling capability
  • Liability considerations: Commercial property liability and business operation impact create higher liability exposure
  • Documentation requirements: Commercial work often requires more detailed documentation (compliance with commercial property requirements, insurance documentation, refrigerant management records)
  • After-hours and weekend service: Commercial customers often require after-hours service to avoid business disruption
  • Code compliance: Commercial work subject to more stringent code requirements than residential (NFPA 96 for restaurants, IBC for commercial buildings, OSHA workplace safety)

Our commercial service maintains transparent pricing matched to actual scope and complexity. Commercial customers benefit from contractor expertise in commercial-specific requirements vs. residential contractors attempting commercial work.


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