Cooling load in Aurora
Cooling demand in Aurora is high — these are larger modern homes with big glass, vaulted ceilings, and second floors that run hot. Most already have central air, so the work is replacing aging 90s and 2000s condensers, adding zoning so the upstairs and bonus rooms actually cool, and fixing systems that were undersized for the square footage when the house was built. Ductless mini-splits show up in sunrooms, finished basements, and additions where the main system can't reach.
Local heating stock in Aurora
Aurora is one of the higher-income exurbs in our western reach, and its housing reflects it. The Walden and Barrington golf communities, Aurora Shores, and the subdivisions around City Center are largely 80s-90s-and-newer builds running high-efficiency forced-air, with a growing share of heat pumps and dual-fuel systems on the newer construction. The work here skews toward bigger homes with multiple zones, finished basements, and bonus rooms over garages that the original system was never balanced to heat evenly. Less old-boiler work than Ravenna or Kent, more zoning, controls, and right-sizing on large modern homes.
What we see across the county
Portage skews newer than Trumbull or Mahoning. Aurora and Streetsboro grew through the 80s and 90s, so high-efficiency forced-air with central AC is the norm. Kent has a mix — student-rental triplexes with original boilers, faculty homes with mid-grade furnaces, and post-2000 builds with heat pumps showing up more every year. We see fewer steam systems here than in Trumbull, and more ductless mini-splits in additions and converted attics near campus. That's the backdrop your Aurora system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.