About This Service
About this Service
Radiant heat in Aurora's diverse neighborhoods—single-family homes, apartment complexes, and strip commercial properties—addresses varied heating demands and snow clearance across the E-470 corridor and Parker Road. Hydronic PEX tubing installs in concrete slabs beneath tile, carpet, or polished concrete to deliver even warmth without drafts or noise. Mixed residential and commercial areas require flexible designs—individual homes, multi-unit buildings, and retail spaces—each with zoned control to match occupancy and energy budgets.
Hydronic systems circulate warm water through closed-loop PEX tubing embedded in floor slabs, with manifolds distributing flow across zones. Plains expansive soils demand careful slab preparation with control joints and reinforcement to prevent cracking. Urban heat island winters create variable snow patterns across neighborhoods, requiring systems that adapt to localized freeze-thaw cycles. Anschutz Medical Campus and Iliff Avenue properties need rapid activation to ensure safe access for staff and patients.
Snow melt systems extend radiant heat to driveways, parking lots, and pedestrian walkways using the same hydronic infrastructure. Automated moisture sensors activate before ice forms, preventing liability and downtime across diverse property types. Apartment complexes require systems that clear shared driveways and entry steps for multiple tenants. Strip commercial properties need snow melt for customer parking and storefront access during business hours.
Installation begins with a site assessment to map heating zones, manifold locations, and snow melt coverage across the property. Licensed hydronic engineers design systems that fit diverse building types and integrate with existing mechanical infrastructure. Commissioning includes pressure testing, flow balancing, and owner or facility manager training to ensure reliable operation through Aurora's coldest weeks.