Cooling load in Geneva-on-the-Lake
Right on the open water, Geneva-on-the-Lake gets the coolest summers we cover — the lake breeze keeps the resort comfortable through most of the season. Many cottages have no central air at all, relying on window units and the breeze, and that's often enough. When owners do want cooling, especially for rentals, we install ductless mini-splits that add quiet, efficient AC to a cottage without ductwork, sized for the genuinely mild lakeshore load.
Local heating stock in Geneva-on-the-Lake
Geneva-on-the-Lake is Ohio's first summer resort, and that history defines its housing. Much of the stock along the Strip and the lakefront started as seasonal cottages — built for July, not January — and a lot of it was later winterized for year-round or rental use. That shows up in the heating: undersized furnaces that were never meant for a snow-belt winter, electric baseboard and space heaters in additions, and exposed supply runs in crawl spaces and unheated lake rooms. Seasonal homes left at low heat over winter are the most common freeze-up calls we get up here, and the resort's mix of full-time, part-time, and rental properties means no two heating setups are alike.
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 Geneva-on-the-Lake system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.