04
Geothermal Heating
“Can geothermal heating work for a Connecticut house?”

Geothermal heat pump systems move heat to and from the ground instead of generating it from fuel. In CT's climate they provide both heating in winter and cooling in summer at significantly lower operating cost than conventional systems once you're past the initial investment.
We install closed-loop ground-source systems, tied into a home's existing ductwork or to a new hydronic distribution. The install coordinates drilling or trenching for the ground loop with the indoor equipment swap.
Geothermal qualifies for the federal residential clean-energy tax credit. We can point you at the current rules but the accounting conversation is between you and your tax preparer.
What we do on this job
- 01Site evaluation for closed-loop ground-source suitability
- 02Ground loop coordination (vertical boreholes or horizontal trenching)
- 03Heat pump sizing and interior equipment installation
- 04Tie-in to existing or new duct distribution
- 05Tie-in to existing or new hydronic distribution
- 06Commissioning and homeowner walkthrough
