Cooling load in Ashtabula
Ashtabula gets the mildest summers in our whole service area — the lake keeps daytime highs down and the breeze off the water does a lot of the work. Most older Harbor homes were built with no central air at all, so cooling here is window units, a ductless mini-split added to a bedroom or sunroom, and the occasional retrofit condenser. When we do install AC, we size it honestly for a lakeshore cooling load, not an inland one — oversizing a unit on a town that rarely sees a brutal heat wave just leaves you with a clammy, short-cycling house.
Local heating stock in Ashtabula
Ashtabula is a Lake Erie port town, and its housing reflects a century of harbor-era building. Bridge Street and the older Harbor neighborhoods are full of 1890s–1940s homes with gravity 'octopus' furnaces converted to forced air, the occasional surviving boiler, and chimneys that were sized for coal long before they were venting gas. Heating gets a real workout here — this is the snow belt, so a furnace that limps along in Warren will be running double the hours in an Ashtabula January. We see undersized and end-of-life furnaces struggle against lake-effect cold, and we keep parts for older equipment on the truck because that's most of what the Harbor runs.
What we see across the county
Ashtabula housing splits three ways: lakeshore (Ashtabula port, Geneva-on-the-Lake) with older mixed-use and seasonal cottages, farm towns (Jefferson, Andover, Williamsfield) with older homes on propane or wood-supplemented heating, and the Geneva wine-country corridor with mid-grade suburban builds. Standard air-source heat pumps are less common here than in Portage — Ashtabula winters are too brutal for anything but cold-climate inverters. Most homes run gas or propane furnaces with the redundancy of a backup heat source somewhere. That's the backdrop your Ashtabula system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.