HVAC Installation & Replacement in Beverly Hills
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HVAC Installation & Replacement
Replacing a heating and cooling system is one of the larger investments a homeowner makes — and efficiency, comfort, and equipment life depend far more on correct sizing and installation quality than on the brand of equipment.
The Danger of Improper Sizing
A new system underperforms if it's not sized to the home. Oversized equipment short-cycles, wearing out components and failing to remove humidity; undersized equipment runs constantly and never reaches the target temperature. To prevent this, a licensed HVAC contractor performs a Manual J load calculation — analyzing square footage, insulation, window types, climate, and layout. Matching the old unit's capacity is a mistake: the original may have been wrong, or renovations and window upgrades may have changed the load.
Why Quality Installation Is Permit-Scale Work
Installing a central split system, heat pump, or ductless mini-split is a permit-scale project involving high-voltage electrical work, gas connections, structural mounting, and federally regulated refrigerant handling. Existing ductwork must be evaluated too — leaky, undersized, or poorly sealed ducts are a leading reason a correctly sized system still delivers uneven comfort.
The Right Moment for Efficiency Upgrades
A planned replacement is the practical time to consider higher-SEER2 systems, hybrid heat pumps, or multi-zone dampers, since they're far cheaper to build in now than to retrofit later. Because this is a planned project rather than an emergency, it rewards taking time to review the load calculation, compare options, and confirm the installer pulls the required permits and schedules the final inspection. Installation quality — sizing, duct sealing, refrigerant charge, and commissioning — is what determines whether the system delivers its rated efficiency and lasts its full life.
Ductwork: The Overlooked Half of the Job
Homeowners focus on the equipment, but the duct system delivers its performance — and in older homes the ducts are often the weak link. Leaky, undersized, or poorly routed ducts can lose a substantial share of conditioned air into the attic or crawlspace before it ever reaches a room, which is why a home can have a correctly sized system and still cool unevenly. During a replacement, a licensed contractor evaluates duct condition, sealing, and sizing alongside the new equipment, and can recommend sealing or reworking runs so the system actually delivers its rated capacity. Skipping that step is a common reason a new, properly sized unit disappoints. The electrical panel is worth checking too, since a heat-pump or higher-capacity system may need capacity the existing panel doesn't have.
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Serving Beverly Hills
In Beverly Hills: What Local Homeowners Should Know
Beverly Hills runs almost everything itself. The city has its own Building & Safety Division, separate from LADBS, and — less commonly known — its own municipal water utility, blending local groundwater with Metropolitan Water District supply rather than relying on a private provider. Electric service still comes from Southern California Edison, but water permits, plumbing inspections, and service-lateral rules are set by the city, not the county or LA. Housing stock spans 1920s-30s flats south of Sunset and larger post-war and modern construction north of Sunset and in the hillside estates, so a licensed contractor plans differently depending on which side of the boulevard a job sits — older cast-iron and knob-and-tube wiring in the flats, versus larger HVAC and structural scope in the hillside homes. Anyone pulling a permit here should expect city plan review, not a county or LADBS process.
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Frequently asked questions
- How is the right system size determined?
- Through a Manual J load calculation that evaluates square footage, insulation, roof and window design, orientation, and local climate — not by copying the old unit's capacity, which may have been wrong.
- Does new HVAC installation require a permit?
- Yes. It's permit-scale work requiring municipal permits and a post-install inspection, ensuring electrical, refrigerant, structural, and gas connections meet local code.
- Why does my new system still cool unevenly?
- If the equipment is sized correctly but some rooms stay uncomfortable, the ductwork is the usual cause — leaky or poorly routed ducts lose conditioned air into the attic or crawlspace and unbalance airflow.
- Is a heat pump worth considering for a replacement?
- For mild Southern California climates, often yes — a modern heat pump handles both heating and cooling in one system, can cut energy use, and may qualify for federal tax credits and utility rebates.