Cooling load in Ravenna
Cooling in Ravenna follows the housing age. The pre-1950 downtown and North End homes had central air added long after they were built, so we see undersized condensers, awkward line-set runs, and ductwork that was never designed for cooling load. The mid-century and later neighborhoods cool more predictably but often run an original, oversized unit that short-cycles and never really pulls the humidity out on a muggy July afternoon.
Local heating stock in Ravenna
Ravenna is the Portage County seat and its oldest core, which makes it the closest thing in the county to the steel-belt housing we work on in Warren. Downtown and the older North End neighborhoods are full of homes built before 1950 — gravity furnaces retrofitted to forced air, the occasional original boiler, and chimney-vented systems that have been patched for decades. Past the older core, the postwar and 70s-80s neighborhoods run mid-grade forced-air furnaces, plenty of them original and overdue. Ravenna gives us more old-system work than the newer Portage cities to the north.
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 Ravenna system lives in — and why we stock parts for every era on the truck instead of forcing one solution on every home.