In May 2024, the owner of a small commercial building on West Temple near 1300 South contacted us about her 6-unit residential apartment building above ground-floor retail spaces. The 1924 mixed-use brick building had been recently renovated (2019 substantial renovation including interior modernization and code compliance updates) but the existing heating system — a single 1986 atmospheric gas boiler serving all 6 residential units plus the commercial spaces through original cast iron radiator distribution — was the only system that hadn’t been modernized during the 2019 renovation budget. The boiler had been performing reliably but at 67% combustion efficiency (declining from 80% AFUE nameplate); the property owner was planning capital investment for boiler replacement and contacted us for evaluation. Dakota Whitfield conducted comprehensive evaluation: original 1924 cast iron radiator distribution in remarkably good condition (98 years service life with appropriate maintenance), supply piping mostly original copper in serviceable condition, current boiler oversized for actual building heat load (140,000 BTU/hr installed vs. ~95,000 BTU/hr required after building insulation improvements during 2019 renovation), zone control basic (single zone serving entire building) limiting tenant comfort customization. Dakota’s recommendation: replace 1986 atmospheric boiler with Viessmann Vitodens 200-W modulating condensing 100,000 BTU/hr (appropriately sized for current building load) + add zoning system (separate zones per residential floor + commercial space zone) + Sentinel X100/X200 water treatment + new Taco 0015e3 ECM circulators + Belimo TruZone zone valves + outdoor reset controls. Total cost $28,400 installed; $24,200 net after $2,000 ThermWise + $1,200 IRA 25C + $1,000 federal additional credits for multi-family residential. Project completed summer 2024 during tenant low-disruption season; 32% gas consumption reduction first winter through right-sizing + zoning + modulation. Ballpark’s combination of transitioning mixed-use commercial-residential properties, working-class to gentrifying demographics, and active development creates distinctive HVAC service patterns we specialize in.
The opening scenario represents Ballpark’s significant mixed-use building service market. The 1924 commercial-residential mixed-use building pattern (ground-floor retail + multi-unit residential above) appears frequently throughout Ballpark’s West Temple corridor. Single boiler serving entire building (typical 1890s-1940s construction pattern) creates: shared heating obligations across commercial and residential uses, zoning challenges as commercial spaces typically operate different hours/temperatures than residential, oversizing common after building improvements over decades, tenant comfort customization opportunities through modern zoning systems. Dakota Whitfield’s hydronic specialty supports these complex mixed-use boiler service projects.
Recent project: 1912 Ballpark Foursquare on Edison Street, comprehensive HVAC replacement during major home renovation (recent purchaser by young professional couple). Customer (engaged in extensive home restoration) preserved original 1912 architectural character while modernizing systems. Original 1965 atmospheric Lennox furnace (60 years service life) and 1985 York central AC (40 years) replaced with: Bryant Evolution 97% AFUE variable-speed furnace (premium tier reflecting customer’s commitment to home + budget) + Bryant Evolution 18 SEER2 variable-speed AC + AprilAire 600M whole-home humidifier + Aeroseal duct sealing (improved 32% to 7% leakage) + ecobee SmartThermostat Premium. Sealed combustion conversion through rear wall preserving original front-facing brick chimney. $18,400 installed; $15,200 net after $1,200 IRA 25C + $400 Wattsmart + $1,400 ThermWise + $200 federal additional credits. First-winter gas reduction 48% vs. prior atmospheric system.
Ballpark’s recent modern condo development (2015-2024) creates standardized service patterns. Recent ongoing service: 2019-built 12-unit Ballpark condo building, individual unit Comfort Care plan adoption (8 of 12 units enrolled, $245/year each = $1,960 collective from individual unit plans). HOA also maintains common-area HVAC contract for hallway ventilation systems + parking garage exhaust + lobby HVAC. Modern Ballpark condo HVAC pattern: standardized Bryant or Carrier equipment specifications across building, modern controls with smart thermostat compatibility, typical 18-25 year equipment service life expectation, predictable annual maintenance patterns.
Ballpark’s West Temple commercial corridor includes 8-12 restaurants requiring commercial kitchen ventilation specialty service. Recent ongoing relationship: locally-owned restaurant on West Temple near 1700 South, 5-year service relationship since 2020. Service scope: Type I exhaust hood maintenance (NFPA 96 compliance), quarterly hood cleaning, makeup air system service, fire suppression system coordination, restaurant HVAC tune-ups. $1,800 annual contract supporting restaurant operations.
Smith’s Ballpark home games (typical Salt Lake Bees season April-September with home games approximately 70 dates per season) create distinctive scheduling considerations for Ballpark HVAC service. Game day patterns: substantial traffic and parking pressure within several blocks of stadium (2-3 hours before through 1-2 hours after games), commercial properties near stadium experience peak business during game periods, residential properties near stadium may have temporary occupancy changes from out-of-town visitors. HVAC service scheduling accommodates game day patterns: avoiding service work near stadium during game day timing, coordinating with stadium-adjacent commercial properties’ business operations.
Ballpark-specific pricing factors: typically comparable to SLC standard rates; commercial work pricing reflects commercial equipment requirements; mixed-use building work often requires specialty coordination labor ($245-485 added).
Pre-project comprehensive evaluation supports informed planning + capital budgeting + tenant communication.
Most Ballpark HVAC service unaffected by stadium proximity beyond occasional scheduling adjustments during major game days. Routine maintenance and non-emergency service generally scheduled outside game day timing for stadium-adjacent properties.
ThermWise multi-family residential rebates can substantially offset cost ($1,400-4,000+ typical); IRA 25C credits apply when residential portion meets eligibility. Comprehensive consultation provides project-specific quote.
Heat pump conversion in Ballpark historic homes: approximately 8 completed projects 2022-2025 reflecting growing adoption. Most successful conversions include electrical service upgrade, ductwork capacity verification, and weatherization improvements supporting heat pump effectiveness.
Same fundamental service quality across customer segments; approach customization respects different customer priorities and communication preferences. Our service philosophy: each customer receives transparent recommendations matched to their actual needs, not pushed toward equipment tiers misaligned with their goals.
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