Old Georgetown / Downtown
Heritage homes around Main, Mill, Queen, and Albert. Walking distance to the GO Station. Older boilers and retrofitted forced-air systems are common.
Georgetown is home base for us. We've worked on furnaces, AC systems, and heat pumps across every neighborhood — from the heritage homes off Mill Street, through Delrex bungalows and the Park District, all the way out to the newer subdivisions in Georgetown South. Same-day response across the town, and we know the housing stock well enough to anticipate what we'll find before we open the panel.
Georgetown is the largest community in Halton Hills, with a population of roughly 44,000 residents. The town sits between Highway 7 and the Niagara Escarpment, with the Credit River cutting through the western side near Glen Williams. It's served by the Georgetown GO Station on Mountainview Road, which puts central Toronto about 50 minutes away by train.
The housing stock spans nearly two centuries. Old Georgetown — the streets around Main, Mill, Queen, and Albert — has heritage homes from the 1800s, many with original boilers retrofitted into forced-air systems. Park District and Moore Park are mature mid-century neighborhoods. Delrex, the large 1960s–70s subdivision bordering Highway 7 and the Black Creek ravine, is now hitting its second or third HVAC system. Georgetown South and the newer subdivisions east of Mountainview Road are 1990s and later, with modern ductwork and high-efficiency equipment as standard.
Three patterns come up consistently. First, oversized furnaces in Delrex and Park District homes — when these subdivisions were built, contractors defaulted to oversized equipment as a safety margin, and replacement installers have often perpetuated the same sizing. We see homes with 100,000 BTU furnaces that should have 60,000 BTU based on a proper Manual J calculation. Right-sizing on replacement is the single biggest improvement we make.
Second, undersized ductwork in older homes — heritage homes downtown were originally heated by boilers or coal furnaces with gravity ducts. Forced-air retrofits often used the existing return paths, which can be too restrictive for modern AC airflow. We measure static pressure and recommend additions when needed, rather than installing a 3-ton AC into ductwork sized for 1.5-ton heating airflow.
Third, rebate-eligible heat pump conversions across the town. Georgetown has full natural gas service, so the typical recommendation is a hybrid heat pump + gas furnace system, which captures the full Ontario rebate stack while keeping gas reliability for the coldest snaps. Many homes are at the right age (10–15 year old furnace and AC) for the math to work.
Heritage homes around Main, Mill, Queen, and Albert. Walking distance to the GO Station. Older boilers and retrofitted forced-air systems are common.
Mature neighborhood around the Georgetown Fairgrounds. Mix of larger and smaller homes. Mid-century housing stock typically on its second or third HVAC system.
Large 1960s–70s subdivision bordering Highway 7. Bungalows and 2-storey homes with original ductwork often undersized for modern equipment.
North of downtown. Slightly larger homes than Delrex average. Steady demand for high-efficiency upgrades.
Mature curb-appeal area with ravine lots and pool homes. Pool heaters and increased cooling demand from sun-exposed lots.
Newest part of Georgetown — 1989 onwards. Modern detached and townhomes. Mostly maintenance and smart controls work.
Every service we offer is available in Georgetown with same-day response on most repair calls. Heat pump conversions and high-efficiency furnace replacements are our highest-volume installation work in town.
Fast, reliable furnace repair when your heat goes out — we diagnose the problem, explain your options, and get your home warm again.
Replacing an aging furnace? We size correctly, recommend the right efficiency tier for your home, and walk you through every applicable rebate.
When your AC quits in July, you need someone fast. Same-day diagnosis and repair across Halton Hills, with honest fix-vs-replace advice.
An undersized or oversized AC will run you ragged. We do a proper Manual J load calc, then install central air systems that actually fit your home.
Cold-climate heat pumps that work down to -25°C and below, with rebate stacking that can cover up to $7,500 of your installation.
When your furnace fails at -20°C or your AC quits in a heatwave, we'll be there. Real 24/7 emergency service across Halton Hills.
When we say we work in Georgetown, we mean it — we're familiar with the area, the housing, and the local landmarks.
During business hours, within 4 hours for genuine no-heat emergencies — often faster, since we're based locally. After hours, our 24/7 dispatch typically gets a technician on-site within 4–6 hours. We prioritize households with young children, elderly residents, or anyone medically vulnerable in extreme cold.
Yes. We work on every era of housing in Georgetown — heritage homes off Mill Street with retrofitted forced-air systems, Delrex bungalows with original ductwork, and modern Georgetown South homes with high-efficiency equipment. Our technicians are comfortable working in tight basements, finished mechanical rooms, and crawl spaces alike.
For most of Georgetown — yes, especially as a hybrid system paired with a gas furnace. The town has full natural gas service, so a hybrid system uses the heat pump for everyday heating and cooling and switches to gas during cold snaps below about -15°C. This captures the full Ontario rebate stack ($4,000–$7,500 typical) while keeping winter reliability rock-solid. Homes built before 1980 sometimes need duct upgrades to support heat pump airflow — we assess this on the in-home consultation.
Yes. Halton Hills requires a building permit for furnace replacements, plus a TSSA gas inspection. We pull both as part of the install — you don't need to call the town or coordinate inspectors. Skipping permits is something some installers do to cut costs but it voids manufacturer warranties and creates problems on resale, so we always do this properly.
The same Ontario-wide programs apply: Home Renovation Savings (HRS), Canada Greener Homes Loan, and OHPA for oil-heated homes. Stack values typically run $1,500–$5,000 for high-efficiency furnace replacements and $4,000–$7,500 for heat pump systems. We file every form on every eligible install — you sign, we submit, and we follow up until the cheque arrives.
Yes — anywhere within the L7G postal area is core service area. Rural addresses on conservation land or larger lots can sometimes have unique considerations (propane heat, well water systems, longer service runs) that we handle as standard.
Call us, send a message, or book online. We respond within an hour during working hours.
Mon–Fri 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM · Saturday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM · 24/7 emergency service available